This patch adds the `REQUIRES: shell` directive to six test files that
use the `ulimit` command, ensuring these tests are only run in
environments where a full POSIX-compliant shell is available. The lit
internal shell does not use or support the `ulimit` command, which
causes failures when running tests with `LIT_USE_INTERNAL_SHELL=1 ninja
check-compiler-rt`
Specifically, one of the errors encountered is:
```
# RUN: at line 4
ulimit -s 1000
# executed command: ulimit -s 1000
# .---command stderr------------
# | 'ulimit': command not found
# `-----------------------------
# error: command failed with exit status: 127
```
Since, the lit internal shell doesn't support `ulimit`, adding this
requirement prevents these tests from failing in the lit internal shell,
thereby improving the reliability of the test suite in environments
where the full shell is not available.
This change is relevant for [[RFC] Enabling the Lit Internal Shell by
Default](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-enabling-the-lit-internal-shell-by-default/80179/3)
fixes: #102398
When running tests in compiler-rt using the lit internal shell with the
following command:
```
LIT_USE_INTERNAL_SHELL=1 ninja check-compiler-rt
```
one common error that occurs is:
```
'XRAY_OPTIONS=patch_premain=false:verbosity=1': command not found
```
This error, along with over 50 similar "environment variable not found"
errors, appears across 35 files in complier-rt. These errors happen
because the environment variables are not being set correctly when the
internal shell is used, leading to commands failing due to unrecognized
environment variables.
This patch addresses the issue by using the `env` command to properly
set the environment variables before running the tests. By explicitly
setting the environment variables through `env`, the internal shell can
correctly interpret and apply them, allowing the tests to pass.
fixes: #102395
[link to
RFC](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-enabling-the-lit-internal-shell-by-default/80179)
Per the man page, PR_GET_NAME stores a null terminated string into the
input `char name[16]`.
This also adds prctl support in ASAN to detect freed memory being passed
to `prctl(PR_GET_NAME, ...)`:
D135716 introduced -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern where supported.
Unfortunately this introduces unwanted memset() for large stack arrays,
as shown by the new tests added for asan and msan (tsan already had this
test).
In general, the problem of compiler-inserted memintrinsic calls
(memset/memcpy/memmove) is not new to compiler-rt, and has been a
problem before.
To avoid introducing unwanted memintrinsic calls, we redefine
memintrinsics as __sanitizer_internal_mem* at the assembly level for
most source files automatically (where sanitizer_common_internal_defs.h
is included).
In few cases, redefining a symbol in this way causes issues for
interceptors, namely the memintrinsic interceptor themselves. For such
source files we have to selectively disable the redefinition.
Other alternatives have been considered, but simply do not work well in
the context of compiler-rt:
1. Linker --wrap: this does not work because --wrap only
applies to the final link, and would not apply when building
sanitizer static libraries.
2. Changing references to memset() via objcopy: this may work,
but due to the complexities of the build system, introducing
such a post-processing step for the right object files (in
particular object files defining memset cannot be touched)
seems infeasible.
The chosen solution works well (as shown by the tests). Other libraries
have chosen the same solution where nothing else works (see e.g. glibc's
"symbol-hacks.h").
v4:
- Add interface attribute to __sanitizer_internal_mem* declarations as
well, as otherwise some compilers (MSVC) will complain.
- Add SANITIZER_COMMON_NO_REDEFINE_BUILTINS to source files using
C++STL, since this could lead to ODR violations (see added comment).
v3:
- Don't use ALIAS() to alias internal_mem*() functions to
__sanitizer_internal_mem*() functions, but just define them as
ALWAYS_INLINE functions instead. This will work on darwin and windows.
v2:
- Fix ubsan_minimal build where compiler decides to insert
memset/memcpy: ubsan_minimal has work without RTSanitizerCommonLibc,
therefore do not redefine the builtins.
- Fix definition of internal_mem* functions with compilers that want the
aliased function to already be defined before.
- Fix definition of __sanitizer_internal_mem* functions with compilers
more pedantic about attribute placement around extern "C".
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151152
This reverts commit fc011a72881cdddc95bfa61f3f38916c29b7e362.
This reverts commit 4ad6a0c9a409b19b950a6a2a90d5405cea2e9b89.
This reverts commit 4b1eb4cf0e8eff5f68410720167b4986da597010.
Still causes Windows build bots to fail.
D135716 introduced -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern where supported.
Unfortunately this introduces unwanted memset() for large stack arrays,
as shown by the new tests added for asan and msan (tsan already had this
test).
In general, the problem of compiler-inserted memintrinsic calls
(memset/memcpy/memmove) is not new to compiler-rt, and has been a
problem before.
To avoid introducing unwanted memintrinsic calls, we redefine
memintrinsics as __sanitizer_internal_mem* at the assembly level for
most source files automatically (where sanitizer_common_internal_defs.h
is included).
In few cases, redefining a symbol in this way causes issues for
interceptors, namely the memintrinsic interceptor themselves. For such
source files we have to selectively disable the redefinition.
Other alternatives have been considered, but simply do not work well in
the context of compiler-rt:
1. Linker --wrap: this does not work because --wrap only
applies to the final link, and would not apply when building
sanitizer static libraries.
2. Changing references to memset() via objcopy: this may work,
but due to the complexities of the build system, introducing
such a post-processing step for the right object files (in
particular object files defining memset cannot be touched)
seems infeasible.
The chosen solution works well (as shown by the tests). Other libraries
have chosen the same solution where nothing else works (see e.g. glibc's
"symbol-hacks.h").
v3:
- Don't use ALIAS() to alias internal_mem*() functions to
__sanitizer_internal_mem*() functions, but just define them as
ALWAYS_INLINE functions instead. This will work on darwin and windows.
v2:
- Fix ubsan_minimal build where compiler decides to insert
memset/memcpy: ubsan_minimal has work without RTSanitizerCommonLibc,
therefore do not redefine the builtins.
- Fix definition of internal_mem* functions with compilers that want the
aliased function to already be defined before.
- Fix definition of __sanitizer_internal_mem* functions with compilers
more pedantic about attribute placement around extern "C".
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151152
This reverts commit 4369de7af46605522bf7dbe3bc31d00b0eb4bee6.
Fails on Mac OS with "sanitizer_libc.cpp:109:5: error: aliases are not
supported on darwin".
D135716 introduced -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern where supported.
Unfortunately this introduces unwanted memset() for large stack arrays,
as shown by the new tests added for asan and msan (tsan already had this
test).
In general, the problem of compiler-inserted memintrinsic calls
(memset/memcpy/memmove) is not new to compiler-rt, and has been a
problem before.
To avoid introducing unwanted memintrinsic calls, we redefine
memintrinsics as __sanitizer_internal_mem* at the assembly level for
most source files automatically (where sanitizer_common_internal_defs.h
is included).
In few cases, redefining a symbol in this way causes issues for
interceptors, namely the memintrinsic interceptor themselves. For such
source files we have to selectively disable the redefinition.
Other alternatives have been considered, but simply do not work well in
the context of compiler-rt:
1. Linker --wrap: this does not work because --wrap only
applies to the final link, and would not apply when building
sanitizer static libraries.
2. Changing references to memset() via objcopy: this may work,
but due to the complexities of the build system, introducing
such a post-processing step for the right object files (in
particular object files defining memset cannot be touched)
seems infeasible.
The chosen solution works well (as shown by the tests). Other libraries
have chosen the same solution where nothing else works (see e.g. glibc's
"symbol-hacks.h").
v2:
- Fix ubsan_minimal build where compiler decides to insert
memset/memcpy: ubsan_minimal has work without RTSanitizerCommonLibc,
therefore do not redefine the builtins.
- Fix definition of internal_mem* functions with compilers that want the
aliased function to already be defined before.
- Fix definition of __sanitizer_internal_mem* functions with compilers
more pedantic about attribute placement around extern "C".
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151152
D135716 introduced -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern where supported.
Unfortunately this introduces unwanted memset() for large stack arrays,
as shown by the new tests added for asan and msan (tsan already had this
test).
In general, the problem of compiler-inserted memintrinsic calls
(memset/memcpy/memmove) is not new to compiler-rt, and has been a
problem before.
To avoid introducing unwanted memintrinsic calls, we redefine
memintrinsics as __sanitizer_internal_mem* at the assembly level for
most source files automatically (where sanitizer_common_internal_defs.h
is included).
In few cases, redefining a symbol in this way causes issues for
interceptors, namely the memintrinsic interceptor themselves. For such
source files we have to selectively disable the redefinition.
Other alternatives have been considered, but simply do not work well in
the context of compiler-rt:
1. Linker --wrap: this does not work because --wrap only
applies to the final link, and would not apply when building
sanitizer static libraries.
2. Changing references to memset() via objcopy: this may work,
but due to the complexities of the build system, introducing
such a post-processing step for the right object files (in
particular object files defining memset cannot be touched)
seems infeasible.
The chosen solution works well (as shown by the tests). Other libraries
have chosen the same solution where nothing else works (see e.g. glibc's
"symbol-hacks.h").
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151152
Showing __interceptor_ as part of the function name in reports does not
make sense and is distracting.
Strip the interceptor function name before printing.
Reviewed By: dvyukov, vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151343
This is an ongoing series of commits that are reformatting our
Python code. This catches the last of the python files to
reformat. Since they where so few I bunched them together.
Reformatting is done with `black`.
If you end up having problems merging this commit because you
have made changes to a python file, the best way to handle that
is to run git checkout --ours <yourfile> and then reformat it
with black.
If you run into any problems, post to discourse about it and
we will try to help.
RFC Thread below:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-document-and-standardize-python-code-style
Reviewed By: jhenderson, #libc, Mordante, sivachandra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150784
Unpoison by strlen(dest), as dn_expand
returns the size if the compressed name (src).
Reviewed By: kstoimenov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129244
As there 3 intercepts that depend on libresolv, link tests in ./configure scripts may be confuse by the presence of resolv symbols (i.e. dn_expand) even with -lresolv and get a runtime error.
Android provides the functionality in libc.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D122849https://reviews.llvm.org/D126851
Reviewed By: eugenis, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127145
This interceptor only addresses writes to inputs. Reads of inputs are not checked.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126851
A signal handler can alter ucontext_t to affect execution after
the signal returns. Check that the contents are initialized.
Restoring unitialized values in registers can't be good.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116209
ucontext_t can be larger than its static size if it contains
AVX state and YMM/ZMM registers.
Currently a signal handler that tries to access that state
can produce false positives with random origins on stack.
Account for the additional ucontext_t state.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116208
Also unpoison IO_write_base/_IO_write_end buffer
memcpy from fclose and fflash can copy internal bytes without metadata into user memory.
Reviewed By: eugenis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91858
Add functions exposed via the MSAN interface to enable MSAN within
binaries that perform manual stack switching (e.g. through using fibers
or coroutines).
This functionality is analogous to the fiber APIs available for ASAN and TSAN.
Fixesgoogle/sanitizers#1232
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86471
These lit configuration files are really Python source code. Using the
.py file extension helps editors and tools use the correct language
mode. LLVM and Clang already use this convention for lit configuration,
this change simply applies it to all of compiler-rt.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, dberris
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63658
llvm-svn: 364591
Disable tests requiring sunrpc when the relevant headers are missing.
In order to accommodate that, move the header check
from sanitizer_common to base-config-ix, and define the check result
as a global variable there. Use it afterwards both for definition
needed by sanitizer_common, and to control 'sunrpc' test feature.
While at it, remove the append_have_file_definition macro that was used
only once, and no longer fits the split check-definition.
Bug report: https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/974
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47819
llvm-svn: 351109
execve("/proc/self/exe") will not work if the binary relies on
$EXEC_ORIGIN in an rpath. Query AT_EXECFN instead, which will give the
same string that the current binary was exec'd with.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54113
llvm-svn: 346215
Summary:
Following up on and complementing D44404.
Currently many allocator specific errors (OOM, for example) are reported as
a text message and CHECK(0) termination, not stack, no details, not too
helpful nor informative. To improve the situation, detailed and
structured errors were defined and reported under the appropriate conditions.
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: srhines, delcypher, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47793
llvm-svn: 334338
Summary: Extend the sendmsg test to cover all recv*.
Reviewers: vitalybuka
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41620
llvm-svn: 321774