libunwind and openmp to the upstream release_80 branch r364487
(effectively, 8.0.1 rc3). The 8.0.1 release will most likely
have no further changes.
MFC after: 1 week
X-MFC-With: r349004
Otherwise a future call to elf_errno() will return a non-zero value.
update_shdr(), for example, treats any errors associated with the ELF
descriptor as fatal. Clear the error per the first example in
elf_errmsg.3.
Convert to elf_getshdrstrndx() while here since elf_getshstrndx() is
apparently deprecated.
Reported by: royger
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20852
Clarify comments on helpers used by LFTR [NFC]
I'm slowly wrapping my head around this code, and am making comment
improvements where I can.
Pull in r360972 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[LFTR] Factor out a helper function for readability purpose [NFC]
Pull in r360976 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[IndVars] Don't reimplement Loop::isLoopInvariant [NFC]
Using dominance vs a set membership check is indistinguishable from a
compile time perspective, and the two queries return equivelent
results. Simplify code by using the existing function.
Pull in r360978 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[LFTR] Strengthen assertions in genLoopLimit [NFCI]
Pull in r362292 from upstream llvm trunk (by Nikita Popov):
[IndVarSimplify] Fixup nowrap flags during LFTR (PR31181)
Fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31181 and partial fix
for LFTR poison handling issues in general.
When LFTR moves a condition from pre-inc to post-inc, it may now
depend on value that is poison due to nowrap flags. To avoid this, we
clear any nowrap flag that SCEV cannot prove for the post-inc addrec.
Additionally, LFTR may switch to a different IV that is dynamically
dead and as such may be arbitrarily poison. This patch will correct
nowrap flags in some but not all cases where this happens. This is
related to the adoption of IR nowrap flags for the pre-inc addrec.
(See some of the switch_to_different_iv tests, where flags are not
dropped or insufficiently dropped.)
Finally, there are likely similar issues with the handling of GEP
inbounds, but we don't have a test case for this yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60935
Pull in r362971 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
Prepare for multi-exit LFTR [NFC]
This change does the plumbing to wire an ExitingBB parameter through
the LFTR implementation, and reorganizes the code to work in terms of
a set of individual loop exits. Most of it is fairly obvious, but
there's one key complexity which makes it worthy of consideration.
The actual multi-exit LFTR patch is in D62625 for context.
Specifically, it turns out the existing code uses the backedge taken
count from before a IV is widened. Oddly, we can end up with a
different (more expensive, but semantically equivelent) BE count for
the loop when requerying after widening. For the nestedIV example
from elim-extend, we end up with the following BE counts:
BEFORE: (-2 + (-1 * %innercount) + %limit)
AFTER: (-1 + (sext i32 (-1 + %limit) to i64) + (-1 * (sext i32 %innercount to i64))<nsw>)
This is the only test in tree which seems sensitive to this
difference. The actual result of using the wider BETC on this example
is that we actually produce slightly better code. :)
In review, we decided to accept that test change. This patch is
structured to preserve the old behavior, but a separate change will
immediate follow with the behavior change. (I wanted it separate for
problem attribution purposes.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62880
Pull in r362975 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[LFTR] Use recomputed BE count
This was discussed as part of D62880. The basic thought is that
computing BE taken count after widening should produce (on average)
an equally good backedge taken count as the one before widening.
Since there's only one test in the suite which is impacted by this
change, and it's essentially equivelent codegen, that seems to be a
reasonable assertion. This change was separated from r362971 so that
if this turns out to be problematic, the triggering piece is obvious
and easily revertable.
For the nestedIV example from elim-extend.ll, we end up with the
following BE counts:
BEFORE: (-2 + (-1 * %innercount) + %limit)
AFTER: (-1 + (sext i32 (-1 + %limit) to i64) + (-1 * (sext i32 %innercount to i64))<nsw>)
Note that before is an i32 type, and the after is an i64. Truncating
the i64 produces the i32.
Pull in r362980 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
Factor out a helper function for readability and reuse in a future
patch [NFC]
Pull in r363613 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
Fix a bug w/inbounds invalidation in LFTR (recommit)
Recommit r363289 with a bug fix for crash identified in pr42279.
Issue was that a loop exit test does not have to be an icmp, leading
to a null dereference crash when new logic was exercised for that
case. Test case previously committed in r363601.
Original commit comment follows:
This contains fixes for two cases where we might invalidate inbounds
and leave it stale in the IR (a miscompile). Case 1 is when switching
to an IV with no dynamically live uses, and case 2 is when doing
pre-to-post conversion on the same pointer type IV.
The basic scheme used is to prove that using the given IV (pre or
post increment forms) would have to already trigger UB on the path to
the test we're modifying. As such, our potential UB triggering use
does not change the semantics of the original program.
As was pointed out in the review thread by Nikita, this is defending
against a separate issue from the hasConcreteDef case. This is about
poison, that's about undef. Unfortunately, the two are different, see
Nikita's comment for a fuller explanation, he explains it well.
(Note: I'm going to address Nikita's last style comment in a separate
commit just to minimize chance of subtle bugs being introduced due to
typos.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62939
Pull in r363875 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[LFTR] Rename variable to minimize confusion [NFC]
(Recommit of r363293 which was reverted when a dependent patch was.)
As pointed out by Nikita in D62625, BackedgeTakenCount is generally
used to refer to the backedge taken count of the loop. A conditional
backedge taken count - one which only applies if a particular exit is
taken - is called a ExitCount in SCEV code, so be consistent here.
Pull in r363877 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[LFTR] Stylistic cleanup as suggested in last review comment of
D62939 [NFC]
(Resumbit of r363292 which was reverted along w/an earlier patch)
Pull in r364346 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[LFTR] Adjust debug output to include extensions (if any)
Pull in r364693 from upstream llvm trunk (by Philip Reames):
[IndVars] Remove a bit of manual constant folding [NFC]
SCEV is more than capable of folding (add x, trunc(0)) to x.
Pull in r364709 from upstream llvm trunk (by Nikita Popov):
[LFTR] Fix post-inc pointer IV with truncated exit count (PR41998)
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41998. Usually when we
have a truncated exit count we'll truncate the IV when comparing
against the limit, in which case exit count overflow in post-inc form
doesn't matter. However, for pointer IVs we don't do that, so we have
to be careful about incrementing the IV in the wide type.
I'm fixing this by removing the IVCount variable (which was ExitCount
or ExitCount+1) and replacing it with a UsePostInc flag, and then
moving the actual limit adjustment to the individual cases (which
are: pointer IV where we add to the wide type, integer IV where we
add to the narrow type, and constant integer IV where we add to the
wide type).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63686
Together, these should fix a hang when building the textproc/htmldoc
port, due to an incorrect loop optimization.
PR: 237515
MFC after: 1 week
This is required in order to build on non-FreeBSD systems without setting
all the XAR/XSTRINGS/etc. variables
Reviewed By: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16771
This allows DWARF debugging output to use the common register
mneumonics, such as ra, sp, or t0.
DWARF registers 0-31 are mapped to the 32 general purpose registers,
which are then followed by the 32 floating point registers.
Reviewed by: markj
Approved by: markj (mentor)
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20779
r349482 introduced the definitions and descriptions of the RISC-V
specific e_flags values to elftoolchain. However, the description for
the EF_RISCV_RVE flag was incorrectly duplicated from EF_RISCV_RVC. Fix
this by providing the proper description for this flag.
Reported by: jhb
Approved by: markj (mentor)
This prints out description text with the meaning of 'Flags' value in PowerPC64.
Example:
$ readelf -h ~/tmp/t1-Flag2
ELF Header:
Magic: 7f 45 4c 46 02 02 01 09 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
Class: ELF64
Data: 2's complement, big endian
Version: 1 (current)
OS/ABI: FreeBSD
ABI Version: 0
Type: EXEC (Executable file)
Machine: PowerPC 64-bit
Version: 0x1
Entry point address: 0x10010000
Start of program headers: 64 (bytes into file)
Start of section headers: 209368 (bytes into file)
Flags: 0x2, OpenPOWER ELF V2 ABI
Size of this header: 64 (bytes)
Size of program headers: 56 (bytes)
Number of program headers: 10
Size of section headers: 64 (bytes)
Number of section headers: 34
Section header string table index: 31
Submitted by: alfredo.junior_eldorado.org.br
Reviewed by: luporl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20782
The distinction between ELF header version and OpenPOWER ELF ABI version is
confusing for most of people, so this adds text to "file" output to make it
clear about which OpenPOWER ELF ABI version binary was built for.
The strings used in this change are based on "64-Bit ELF V2 ABI
Specification/3.1. ELF Header" document available at
http://openpowerfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/leabi/content/dbdoclet.50655241_97607.html
Example:
$ file t1-Flag2 -m -m contrib/file/magic/Magdir/elf t1-Flag2: ELF 64-bit MSB
executable, 64-bit PowerPC or cisco 7500, OpenPOWER ELF V2 ABI, version 1
(FreeBSD), dynamically linked, interpreter /libexec/ld-elf.so.1, for FreeBSD
13.0 (1300033), FreeBSD-style, not stripped
Submitted by: alfredo.junior_eldorado.org.br
Reviewed by: luporl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20771
PR/238816 initially addressed updates to usage() however it has now
become a shopping list of fixes to ipmon man pages and usage().
PR: 238816
MFC after: 3 days
Previously we would perform a linear search of the DWARF section
list for ".debug_str". However, libdwarf always caches a pointer to
the strtab image in its debug descriptor. Using it gives a modest
performance improvement when iterating over the attributes of each
DIE.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20759
Use the input file's .shstrtab size as the hint if it exists. This
gives a small performance improvement when processing files with
many sections.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20544
The string's length is already known, so use memcpy() instead of
strcpy() to add it to the string table image.
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20760
Summary:
Toolchain follow-up to r349350. LLVM patches will be submitted upstream for
9.0 as well.
The bsd.cpu.mk change is required because GNU ld assumes BSS-PLT if it
cannot determine for certain that it needs Secure-PLT, and some binaries do
not compile in such a way to make it know to use Secure-PLT.
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn, bdragon, pfg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20598
Summary:
PowerPC has two PLT models: BSS-PLT and Secure-PLT. BSS-PLT uses runtime
code generation to generate the PLT stubs. Secure-PLT was introduced with
GCC 4.1 and Binutils 2.17 (base has GCC 4.2.1 and Binutils 2.17), and is a
more secure PLT format, using a read-only linkage table, with the dynamic
linker populating a non-executable index table.
This is the libc, rtld, and kernel support only. The toolchain and build
parts will be updated separately.
Reviewed By: nwhitehorn, bdragon, pfg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20598
MFC after: 1 month
inconsistent. This patch fixes that and improves the precision of
the description.
Thanks to Tom Marcoen for reporting the issue and providing an
initial patch, on which this change is based.
PR: 237723
Reviewed by: bcr@
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20708
libunwind and openmp to the upstream release_80 branch r363030
(effectively, 8.0.1 rc2). The 8.0.1 release should follow this within a
week or so.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sync libarchive with vendor.
Relevant vendor changes:
- check_symlinks_fsobj() without chdir() and fchdir()
- bsdtar.1 manpage fixes
- patches from OpenBSD to libarchive_fe/passphrase.c
- version bumped to 3.4.0
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Add constants for OpenBSD wxneeded, bootdata and randomize to the
FreeBSD elf_common.h file. This is the file that gets used by the
elftoolchain library.
- Update readelf and elfdump utilities to decode these program headers
if they are encountered.
Note: FreeBSD has it's own version of elfdump(1), which will be updated
in a subsequent commit. I am adding it here anyway because this diff is
going to be submitted upstream.
Discussed with: emaste
Reviewed by: imp
MFC afer: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20548
M contrib/elftoolchain/elfdump/elfdump.c
M contrib/elftoolchain/readelf/readelf.c
M sys/sys/elf_common.h
This replaces some hand-rolled routines and is substantially faster
since libelftc uses a hash table for lookups and insertions, whereas
elfcopy would perform a linear scan of the table.
PR: 234949
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20473
When removing a section, we would loop over all sections looking for
a corresponding relocation section. With r348652 it is much faster
to just use elf_getscn().
PR: 234949
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20471
The tree is indexed by section number. This speeds up elf_getscn()
and its callers, which previously had to traverse a linked list. In
particular, since .shstrtab is often the last section in a file,
elf_strptr() would have to traverse the entire list.
PR: 234949
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20443
In this case, a change was made in one-true-awk from *FS to
getsval(fsloc) in a line just after one of the lines that had the 0 ->
NULL change. It works both ways as far as I can tell. It looks like a
bug fix, but I've not tried to track down which ancient version of
one-true-awk it was in (github starts too late for tracking this
down). Before and after the changes the regression suite is passes
100% relative to the un-modified one-true-awk.
The conversion of 0 -> NULL required a rebase at some point, as noted
in r301289 when pfg commited it. In that rebase, three lines remained
that had been removed in a prior version of awk, and one of them had a
0 -> NULL change causing a conflict. The conflict should have been
resolved by removing the three lines, but wasn't. This introduces a
regression into f.split3 test which prior to this commit we were
failing, but a pure onetrueawk wasn't. Remove the offending 3 lines.
Revert r301689 - one-true-awk: Avoid a NULL dereference.
I got this wrong and the coverity report doesn't match the NetBSD change,
which was thought for a different version.
The change wouldn't hurt but let's wait until upstream figures this out.
Note: this backs out a number of changes we've made to awk because
they aren't upstream, but are on the vendor branch. Those will be
reapplied. svn makes it needlessly difficult to know which ones, but
at least r315426, r301289, and maybe r301691, though there may be
others too. None of these are critical, so bisecting through this
point is safe for all but awk regression tests :).
This is the common case when strip(1) is creating the output file.
The change provides a significant speedup when running on ELF files with
many sections.
PR: 234949
Reviewed by: emaste
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20444
Summary:
Due to missing relocation support in libdwarf for powerpc64, handling of dwarf
info on unlinked objects was bogus.
Examining raw dwarf data on objects compiled on ppc64 with a modern compiler
(in-tree gcc tends to hide the issue, since it only rarely generates relocations
in .debug_info and uses DW_FORM_str instead of DW_FORM_strp for everything), you
will find that the dwarf data appears corrupt, with repeated references to the
compiler version where things like types and function names should appear.
This happens because the 0 offset of .debug_str contains the compiler version,
and without applying the relocations, *all* indirect strings in .dwarf_info will
end up pointing to it.
This corruption then propogates to the CTF data, as ctfconvert relies on
libdwarf to read the dwarf info, for every compiled object (when building a
kernel.)
However, if you examine the dwarf data on a compiled executable, it will appear
correct, because during final link the relocations get applied and baked in by
the linker.
Submitted by: Brandon Bergren
Reviewed By: emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20367