77 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Wesley Norris
19714385e0 Add kernel-address sanitizer support for freestanding targets 2023-02-14 20:54:25 -05:00
Oleksii Lozovskyi
bac15db1d0 Emit basic XRay instrumentation attributes
Add the attributes to functions according to the settings.

"xray-always" overrides "xray-never", and they both override
"xray-ignore-loops" and "xray-instruction-threshold", but we'll
let lints deal with warnings about silly attribute combinations.
2023-02-09 12:28:00 +09:00
Oleksii Lozovskyi
b3cadd2dcf Allow multiple instrumentation attributes
Four because that's the new reasonable maximum for XRay instrumentation
attributes in the following commit.
2023-02-09 12:28:00 +09:00
Kyle Matsuda
c2414dfaa4 change fn_sig query to use EarlyBinder; remove bound_fn_sig query; add EarlyBinder to fn_sig in metadata 2023-01-26 20:28:25 -07:00
Kyle Matsuda
e982971ff2 replace usages of fn_sig query with bound_fn_sig 2023-01-26 20:15:36 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
6689d2df08
Rollup merge of #105955 - Nilstrieb:no-trivial-opt-wrappers-we-have-field-accesses-for-that, r=cjgillot
Remove wrapper functions for some unstable options

They are trivial and just forward to the option. Like most other options, we can just access it directly.
2022-12-25 22:15:00 +01:00
Miguel Ojeda
a65ec44779 Add -Zno-jump-tables
This flag mimics GCC/Clang's `-fno-jump-tables` [1][2], which makes
the codegen backend avoid generating jump tables when lowering switches.

In the case of LLVM, the `"no-jump-tables"="true"` function attribute is
added to every function.

The kernel currently needs it for x86 when enabling IBT [3], as well
as for Alpha (plus VDSO objects in MIPS/LoongArch).

[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Code-Gen-Options.html#index-fno-jump-tables
[2] https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ClangCommandLineReference.html#cmdoption-clang-fjump-tables
[3] https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v6.1/arch/x86/Makefile#L75-L83

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2022-12-20 21:42:54 +01:00
Nilstrieb
fb79e44df6 Remove wrapper functions for some unstable options
They are trivial and just forward to the option. Like most other
options, we can just access it directly.
2022-12-20 15:02:15 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
b740cdcf43 Mark naked functions as never inline in codegen_fn_attrs
Use code generation attributes to ensure that naked functions are never
inline, replacing separate checks in MIR inliner and LLVM code
generation.
2022-12-03 01:04:42 +01:00
SLASHLogin
9a1545861e Simplify existing Diagnostic implementations 2022-11-09 14:56:21 +01:00
SLASHLogin
185ef7b6de Port MissingFeatures and TargetFeatureDisableOrEnable 2022-11-09 14:56:21 +01:00
SLASHLogin
978b5f73e4 Port SanitizerMemtagRequiresMte 2022-11-09 14:56:21 +01:00
Tim Neumann
c15cfc91c4 LLVM 16: Switch to using MemoryEffects 2022-11-04 17:58:16 +00:00
Yan Chen
052887e4b4 Add inline-llvm option for disabling/enabling LLVM inlining 2022-09-09 08:00:47 -07:00
yukang
00b10a5552 get_attr should check that no duplicates are allowed 2022-09-06 14:16:54 +08:00
Augie Fackler
130a1df71e codegen: use new {re,de,}allocator annotations in llvm
This obviates the patch that teaches LLVM internals about
_rust_{re,de}alloc functions by putting annotations directly in the IR
for the optimizer.

The sole test change is required to anchor FileCheck to the body of the
`box_uninitialized` method, so it doesn't see the `allocalign` on
`__rust_alloc` and get mad about the string `alloca` showing up. Since I
was there anyway, I added some checks on the attributes to prove the
right attributes got set.

While we're here, we also emit allocator attributes on
__rust_alloc_zeroed. This should allow LLVM to perform more
optimizations for zeroed blocks, and probably fixes #90032. [This
comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/24194#issuecomment-308791157)
mentions "weird UB-like behaviour with bitvec iterators in
rustc_data_structures" so we may need to back this change out if things
go wrong.

The new test cases require LLVM 15, so we copy them into LLVM
14-supporting versions, which we can delete when we drop LLVM 14.
2022-07-26 09:43:28 -04:00
Ivan Lozano
adf61e3b2b Add ShadowCallStack Support
Adds support for the LLVM ShadowCallStack sanitizer.
2022-07-20 13:43:34 +00:00
Dylan DPC
a027b01f33
Rollup merge of #98998 - workingjubilee:naked-means-no-clothes-enforcement-technology, r=Amanieu
Remove branch target prologues from `#[naked] fn`

This patch hacks around rust-lang/rust#98768 for now via injecting appropriate attributes into the LLVMIR we emit for naked functions. I intend to pursue this upstream so that these attributes can be removed in general, but it's slow going wading through C++ for me.
2022-07-18 21:14:43 +05:30
Joshua Nelson
3c9765cff1 Rename debugging_opts to unstable_opts
This is no longer used only for debugging options (e.g. `-Zoutput-width`, `-Zallow-features`).
Rename it to be more clear.
2022-07-13 17:47:06 -05:00
Jubilee Young
530b5da49b Also stop emitting BTI prologues for naked functions
Same idea but for AArch64.
2022-07-06 22:44:58 -07:00
Jubilee Young
92174f988b Stop emitting CET prologues for naked functions
We can apply nocf_check as a hack for now.
2022-07-06 22:44:54 -07:00
lcnr
6c8265dc56 only_local: always check for misuse 2022-05-10 12:07:35 +02:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
ccff48f97b Replace every String in Target(Options) with Cow<'static, str> 2022-04-03 21:29:57 +02:00
Tomasz Miąsko
095d818e0c Always include global target features in function attributes
This ensures that information about target features configured with
`-C target-feature=...` or detected with `-C target-cpu=native` is
retained for subsequent consumers of LLVM bitcode.

This is crucial for linker plugin LTO, since this information is not
conveyed to the plugin otherwise.
2022-03-04 16:57:34 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
b6f845f225 Use SmallStr when building target-features LLVM attribute 2022-03-04 16:57:34 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
926bf1a371 Pass LLVM string attributes as string slices 2022-03-03 00:28:50 +01:00
bors
c42d846add Auto merge of #94229 - erikdesjardins:rem2, r=nikic
Remove LLVM attribute removal

This was necessary before, because `declare_raw_fn` would always apply
the default optimization attributes to every declared function.
Then `attributes::from_fn_attrs` would have to remove the default
attributes in the case of, e.g. `#[optimize(speed)]` in a `-Os` build.
(see [`src/test/codegen/optimize-attr-1.rs`](03a8cc7df1/src/test/codegen/optimize-attr-1.rs (L33)))

However, every relevant callsite of `declare_raw_fn` (i.e. where we
actually generate code for the function, and not e.g. a call to an
intrinsic, where optimization attributes don't [?] matter)
calls `from_fn_attrs`, so we can remove the attribute setting
from `declare_raw_fn`, and rely on `from_fn_attrs` to apply the correct
attributes all at once.

r? `@ghost` (blocked on #94221)
`@rustbot` label S-blocked
2022-03-02 08:48:33 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
df701a292c Querify global_backend_features
At the very least this serves to deduplicate the diagnostics that are
output about unknown target features provided via CLI.
2022-03-01 01:57:25 +02:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
c97c216efd Direct users towards using Rust feature names in CLI
If they are trying to use features rustc doesn't yet know about,
request a feature request.

Additionally, also warn against using feature names without leading `+`
or `-` signs.
2022-03-01 01:57:10 +02:00
Erik Desjardins
dce14cfacc Remove LLVM attribute removal
This was necessary before, because `declare_raw_fn` would always apply
the default optimization attributes to every declared function,
and then `attributes::from_fn_attrs` would have to remove the default
attributes in the case of, e.g. `#[optimize(speed)]` in a `-Os` build.

However, every relevant callsite of `declare_raw_fn` (i.e. where we
actually generate code for the function, and not e.g. a call to an
intrinsic, where optimization attributes don't [?] matter)
calls `from_fn_attrs`, so we can simply remove the attribute setting
from `declare_raw_fn`, and rely on `from_fn_attrs` to apply the correct
attributes all at once.
2022-02-28 00:02:11 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
91e7e8ddcb just put smallvec lengths in the signature 2022-02-26 16:58:17 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
30d3ce0674 Add LLVM attributes in batches instead of individually
This should improve performance.
2022-02-26 13:14:55 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
0bb72a2c66
Rollup merge of #91675 - ivanloz:memtagsan, r=nagisa
Add MemTagSanitizer Support

Add support for the LLVM [MemTagSanitizer](https://llvm.org/docs/MemTagSanitizer.html).

On hardware which supports it (see caveats below), the MemTagSanitizer can catch bugs similar to AddressSanitizer and HardwareAddressSanitizer, but with lower overhead.

On a tag mismatch, a SIGSEGV is signaled with code SEGV_MTESERR / SEGV_MTEAERR.

# Usage

`-Zsanitizer=memtag -C target-feature="+mte"`

# Comments/Caveats

* MemTagSanitizer is only supported on AArch64 targets with hardware support
* Requires `-C target-feature="+mte"`
* LLVM MemTagSanitizer currently only performs stack tagging.

# TODO

* Tests
* Example
2022-02-18 23:23:03 +01:00
Ivan Lozano
568aeda9e9 MemTagSanitizer Support
Adds support for the LLVM MemTagSanitizer.
2022-02-16 09:39:03 -05:00
Augie Fackler
0958c8f4ca llvm: migrate to new parameter-bearing uwtable attr
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D114543 the uwtable attribute gained a flag
so that we can ask for sync uwtables instead of async, as the former are
much cheaper. The default is async, so that's what I've done here, but I
left a TODO that we might be able to do better.

While in here I went ahead and dropped support for removing uwtable
attributes in rustc: we never did it, so I didn't write the extra C++
bridge code to make it work. Maybe I should have done the same thing
with the `sync|async` parameter but we'll see.
2022-02-14 16:09:53 -05:00
Adam Gemmell
d39a6377e9 Split PAuth target feature 2022-02-10 15:10:33 +00:00
bors
a41a6925ba Auto merge of #91957 - nnethercote:rm-SymbolStr, r=oli-obk
Remove `SymbolStr`

This was originally proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74554#discussion_r466203544. As well as removing the icky `SymbolStr` type, it allows the removal of a lot of `&` and `*` occurrences.

Best reviewed one commit at a time.

r? `@oli-obk`
2021-12-19 09:31:37 +00:00
LegionMammal978
4937a55dfb Remove in_band_lifetimes from rustc_codegen_llvm
See #91867 for more information.
2021-12-16 14:43:32 -05:00
Nicholas Nethercote
056d48a2c9 Remove unnecessary sigils around Symbol::as_str() calls. 2021-12-15 17:32:14 +11:00
Benjamin A. Bjørnseth
bb9dee95ed add rustc option for using LLVM stack smash protection
LLVM has built-in heuristics for adding stack canaries to functions. These
heuristics can be selected with LLVM function attributes. This patch adds a
rustc option `-Z stack-protector={none,basic,strong,all}` which controls the use
of these attributes. This gives rustc the same stack smash protection support as
clang offers through options `-fno-stack-protector`, `-fstack-protector`,
`-fstack-protector-strong`, and `-fstack-protector-all`. The protection this can
offer is demonstrated in test/ui/abi/stack-protector.rs. This fills a gap in the
current list of rustc exploit
mitigations (https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/exploit-mitigations.html),
originally discussed in #15179.

Stack smash protection adds runtime overhead and is therefore still off by
default, but now users have the option to trade performance for security as they
see fit. An example use case is adding Rust code in an existing C/C++ code base
compiled with stack smash protection. Without the ability to add stack smash
protection to the Rust code, the code base artifacts could be exploitable in
ways not possible if the code base remained pure C/C++.

Stack smash protection support is present in LLVM for almost all the current
tier 1/tier 2 targets: see
test/assembly/stack-protector/stack-protector-target-support.rs. The one
exception is nvptx64-nvidia-cuda. This patch follows clang's example, and adds a
warning message printed if stack smash protection is used with this target (see
test/ui/stack-protector/warn-stack-protector-unsupported.rs). Support for tier 3
targets has not been checked.

Since the heuristics are applied at the LLVM level, the heuristics are expected
to add stack smash protection to a fraction of functions comparable to C/C++.
Some experiments demonstrating how Rust code is affected by the different
heuristics can be found in
test/assembly/stack-protector/stack-protector-heuristics-effect.rs. There is
potential for better heuristics using Rust-specific safety information. For
example it might be reasonable to skip stack smash protection in functions which
transitively only use safe Rust code, or which uses only a subset of functions
the user declares safe (such as anything under `std.*`). Such alternative
heuristics could be added at a later point.

LLVM also offers a "safestack" sanitizer as an alternative way to guard against
stack smashing (see #26612). This could possibly also be included as a
stack-protection heuristic. An alternative is to add it as a sanitizer (#39699).
This is what clang does: safestack is exposed with option
`-fsanitize=safe-stack`.

The options are only supported by the LLVM backend, but as with other codegen
options it is visible in the main codegen option help menu. The heuristic names
"basic", "strong", and "all" are hopefully sufficiently generic to be usable in
other backends as well.

Reviewed-by: Nikita Popov <nikic@php.net>

Extra commits during review:

- [address-review] make the stack-protector option unstable

- [address-review] reduce detail level of stack-protector option help text

- [address-review] correct grammar in comment

- [address-review] use compiler flag to avoid merging functions in test

- [address-review] specify min LLVM version in fortanix stack-protector test

  Only for Fortanix test, since this target specifically requests the
  `--x86-experimental-lvi-inline-asm-hardening` flag.

- [address-review] specify required LLVM components in stack-protector tests

- move stack protector option enum closer to other similar option enums

- rustc_interface/tests: sort debug option list in tracking hash test

- add an explicit `none` stack-protector option

Revert "set LLVM requirements for all stack protector support test revisions"

This reverts commit a49b74f92a4e7d701d6f6cf63d207a8aff2e0f68.
2021-11-22 20:06:22 +01:00
Michael Benfield
a17193dbb9 Enable AutoFDO.
This largely involves implementing the options debug-info-for-profiling
and profile-sample-use and forwarding them on to LLVM.

AutoFDO can be used on x86-64 Linux like this:
rustc -O -Cdebug-info-for-profiling main.rs -o main
perf record -b ./main
create_llvm_prof --binary=main --out=code.prof
rustc -O -Cprofile-sample-use=code.prof main.rs -o main2

Now `main2` will have feedback directed optimization applied to it.

The create_llvm_prof tool can be obtained from this github repository:
https://github.com/google/autofdo

Fixes #64892.
2021-10-06 19:36:52 +00:00
Augie Fackler
4185b76dc3 rustc_codegen_llvm: make sse4.2 imply crc32 for LLVM 14
This fixes compiling things like the `snap` crate after
https://reviews.llvm.org/D105462. I added a test that verifies the
additional attribute gets specified, and confirmed that I can build
cargo with both LLVM 13 and 14 with this change applied.
2021-09-20 11:31:55 -04:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
9b67cba4f6 Add support for leaf fn frame pointer elimination
This PR adds ability for the target specifications to specify frame
pointer emission type that's not just “always” or “whatever cg decides”.

In particular there's a new mode that allows omission of the frame
pointer for leaf functions (those that don't call any other functions).

We then set this new mode for Aarch64-based Apple targets.

Fixes #86196
2021-06-30 19:45:17 +03:00
bors
ac923d94f8 Auto merge of #83610 - bjorn3:driver_cleanup, r=cjgillot
rustc_driver cleanup

Best reviewed one commit at a time.
2021-05-12 08:38:03 +00:00
bjorn3
c47eeac612 Move wasm_import_module_map provider to cg_ssa 2021-05-02 18:00:20 +02:00
Alex Crichton
482a3d06c3 rustc: Add a new wasm ABI
This commit implements the idea of a new ABI for the WebAssembly target,
one called `"wasm"`. This ABI is entirely of my own invention
and has no current precedent, but I think that the addition of this ABI
might help solve a number of issues with the WebAssembly targets.

When `wasm32-unknown-unknown` was first added to Rust I naively
"implemented an abi" for the target. I then went to write `wasm-bindgen`
which accidentally relied on details of this ABI. Turns out the ABI
definition didn't match C, which is causing issues for C/Rust interop.
Currently the compiler has a "wasm32 bindgen compat" ABI which is the
original implementation I added, and it's purely there for, well,
`wasm-bindgen`.

Another issue with the WebAssembly target is that it's not clear to me
when and if the default C ABI will change to account for WebAssembly's
multi-value feature (a feature that allows functions to return multiple
values). Even if this does happen, though, it seems like the C ABI will
be guided based on the performance of WebAssembly code and will likely
not match even what the current wasm-bindgen-compat ABI is today. This
leaves a hole in Rust's expressivity in binding WebAssembly where given
a particular import type, Rust may not be able to import that signature
with an updated C ABI for multi-value.

To fix these issues I had the idea of a new ABI for WebAssembly, one
called `wasm`. The definition of this ABI is "what you write
maps straight to wasm". The goal here is that whatever you write down in
the parameter list or in the return values goes straight into the
function's signature in the WebAssembly file. This special ABI is for
intentionally matching the ABI of an imported function from the
environment or exporting a function with the right signature.

With the addition of a new ABI, this enables rustc to:

* Eventually remove the "wasm-bindgen compat hack". Once this
  ABI is stable wasm-bindgen can switch to using it everywhere.
  Afterwards the wasm32-unknown-unknown target can have its default ABI
  updated to match C.

* Expose the ability to precisely match an ABI signature for a
  WebAssembly function, regardless of what the C ABI that clang chooses
  turns out to be.

* Continue to evolve the definition of the default C ABI to match what
  clang does on all targets, since the purpose of that ABI will be
  explicitly matching C rather than generating particular function
  imports/exports.

Naturally this is implemented as an unstable feature initially, but it
would be nice for this to get stabilized (if it works) in the near-ish
future to remove the wasm32-unknown-unknown incompatibility with the C
ABI. Doing this, however, requires the feature to be on stable because
wasm-bindgen works with stable Rust.
2021-04-08 08:03:18 -07:00
bors
a6e7a5aa5d Auto merge of #81234 - repnop:fn-alignment, r=lcnr
Allow specifying alignment for functions

Fixes #75072

This allows the user to specify alignment for functions, which can be useful for low level work where functions need to necessarily be aligned to a specific value.

I believe the error cases not covered in the match are caught earlier based on my testing so I had them just return `None`.
2021-04-06 04:35:26 +00:00
bors
0c7d4effd7 Auto merge of #83592 - nagisa:nagisa/dso_local, r=davidtwco
Set dso_local for hidden, private and local items

This should probably have no real effect in most cases, as e.g. `hidden`
visibility already implies `dso_local` (or at least LLVM IR does not
preserve the `dso_local` setting if the item is already `hidden`), but
it should fix `-Crelocation-model=static` and improve codegen in
executables.

Note that this PR does not exhaustively port the logic in [clang], only the
portion that is necessary to fix a regression from LLVM 12 that relates to
`-Crelocation_model=static`.

Fixes #83335

[clang]: 3001d080c8/clang/lib/CodeGen/CodeGenModule.cpp (L945-L1039)
2021-04-06 02:09:01 +00:00
Wesley Norris
448d07683a Allow specifying alignment for functions 2021-04-05 17:36:51 -04:00
Dylan DPC
0d12422f2d
Rollup merge of #80525 - devsnek:wasm64, r=nagisa
wasm64 support

There is still some upstream llvm work needed before this can land.
2021-04-05 00:24:23 +02:00