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Add AsmParser support for instructions #7

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@b-s-a b-s-a commented Dec 2, 2019

Attribute isCodeGenOnly was removed from most of instruction definitions. Now it is possible to start writing AsmParser.

@jacobly0 jacobly0 force-pushed the z80 branch 4 times, most recently from 6696e2f to 7681d6e Compare January 2, 2020 16:13
@jacobly0 jacobly0 force-pushed the z80 branch 3 times, most recently from b30e6c8 to 69db7e4 Compare January 20, 2020 00:10
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Jan 20, 2020
…t binding

This fixes a failing testcase on Fedora 30 x86_64 (regression Fedora 29->30):

PASS:
./bin/lldb ./lldb-test-build.noindex/functionalities/unwind/noreturn/TestNoreturnUnwind.test_dwarf/a.out -o 'settings set symbols.enable-external-lookup false' -o r -o bt -o quit
  * frame #0: 0x00007ffff7aa6e75 libc.so.6`__GI_raise + 325
    frame #1: 0x00007ffff7a91895 libc.so.6`__GI_abort + 295
    frame #2: 0x0000000000401140 a.out`func_c at main.c:12:2
    frame #3: 0x000000000040113a a.out`func_b at main.c:18:2
    frame #4: 0x0000000000401134 a.out`func_a at main.c:26:2
    frame #5: 0x000000000040112e a.out`main(argc=<unavailable>, argv=<unavailable>) at main.c:32:2
    frame #6: 0x00007ffff7a92f33 libc.so.6`__libc_start_main + 243
    frame #7: 0x000000000040106e a.out`_start + 46

vs.

FAIL - unrecognized abort() function:
./bin/lldb ./lldb-test-build.noindex/functionalities/unwind/noreturn/TestNoreturnUnwind.test_dwarf/a.out -o 'settings set symbols.enable-external-lookup false' -o r -o bt -o quit
  * frame #0: 0x00007ffff7aa6e75 libc.so.6`.annobin_raise.c + 325
    frame #1: 0x00007ffff7a91895 libc.so.6`.annobin_loadmsgcat.c_end.unlikely + 295
    frame #2: 0x0000000000401140 a.out`func_c at main.c:12:2
    frame #3: 0x000000000040113a a.out`func_b at main.c:18:2
    frame #4: 0x0000000000401134 a.out`func_a at main.c:26:2
    frame #5: 0x000000000040112e a.out`main(argc=<unavailable>, argv=<unavailable>) at main.c:32:2
    frame #6: 0x00007ffff7a92f33 libc.so.6`.annobin_libc_start.c + 243
    frame #7: 0x000000000040106e a.out`.annobin_init.c.hot + 46

The extra ELF symbols are there due to Annobin (I did not investigate why this
problem happened specifically since F-30 and not since F-28).

It is due to:

Symbol table '.dynsym' contains 2361 entries:
Valu e          Size Type   Bind   Vis     Name
0000000000022769   5 FUNC   LOCAL  DEFAULT _nl_load_domain.cold
000000000002276e   0 NOTYPE LOCAL  HIDDEN  .annobin_abort.c.unlikely
...
000000000002276e   0 NOTYPE LOCAL  HIDDEN  .annobin_loadmsgcat.c_end.unlikely
...
000000000002276e   0 NOTYPE LOCAL  HIDDEN  .annobin_textdomain.c_end.unlikely
000000000002276e 548 FUNC   GLOBAL DEFAULT abort
000000000002276e 548 FUNC   GLOBAL DEFAULT abort@@GLIBC_2.2.5
000000000002276e 548 FUNC   LOCAL  DEFAULT __GI_abort
0000000000022992   0 NOTYPE LOCAL  HIDDEN  .annobin_abort.c_end.unlikely

GDB has some more complicated preferences between overlapping and/or sharing
address symbols, I have made here so far the most simple fix for this case.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63540
@jacobly0 jacobly0 force-pushed the z80 branch 2 times, most recently from e0b4796 to a4fd568 Compare December 26, 2020 01:45
@jacobly0 jacobly0 force-pushed the z80 branch 2 times, most recently from 8853dcd to d270916 Compare February 5, 2021 07:21
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request May 4, 2021
…rtial type

llvm-dwarfdump crashed for Unit header with DW_UT_partial type.
-------------
llvm-dwarfdump: /tmp/llvm/include/llvm/ADT/Optional.h:197: T& llvm::optional_detail::OptionalStorage<T, true>::getValue() &
[with T = long unsigned int]: Assertion `hasVal' failed.
PLEASE submit a bug report to the technical support section of https://developer.amd.com/amd-aocc and include the crash backtrace.
Stack dump:
0.      Program arguments: llvm-dwarfdump -v /tmp/test/DebugInfo/X86/Output/dwarfdump-he
ader.s.tmp.o
 #0 0x00007f37d5ad8838 llvm::sys::PrintStackTrace(llvm::raw_ostream&, int) /tmp/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc:565:0
 #1 0x00007f37d5ad88ef PrintStackTraceSignalHandler(void*) /tmp/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc:632:0
 #2 0x00007f37d5ad65bd llvm::sys::RunSignalHandlers() /tmp/llvm/lib/Support/Signals.cpp:71:0
 #3 0x00007f37d5ad81b9 SignalHandler(int) /tmp/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc:407:0
 #4 0x00007f37d4c26040 (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x3f040)
 #5 0x00007f37d4c25fb7 raise /build/glibc-S9d2JN/glibc-2.27/signal/../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:51:0
 #6 0x00007f37d4c27921 abort /build/glibc-S9d2JN/glibc-2.27/stdlib/abort.c:81:0
 #7 0x00007f37d4c1748a __assert_fail_base /build/glibc-S9d2JN/glibc-2.27/assert/assert.c:89:0
 #8 0x00007f37d4c17502 (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x30502)
 #9 0x00007f37d7576b81 llvm::optional_detail::OptionalStorage<unsigned long, true>::getValue() & /tmp/llvm/include/llvm/ADT/Optional.h:198:0
 #10 0x00007f37d75726ac llvm::Optional<unsigned long>::operator*() && /tmp/llvm/include/llvm/ADT/Optional.h:309:0
 #11 0x00007f37d7582968 llvm::DWARFCompileUnit::dump(llvm::raw_ostream&, llvm::DIDumpOptions) /tmp/llvm/lib/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFCompileUnit.cpp:30:0
--------------

Patch by: @jini.susan

Reviewed By: @probinson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101255
@jacobly0 jacobly0 force-pushed the z80 branch 2 times, most recently from 913bae3 to ef675e0 Compare May 9, 2021 12:08
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request May 9, 2021
…ing it

Having nested macros in the C code could cause clangd to fail an assert in clang::Preprocessor::setLoadedMacroDirective() and crash.

 #1 0x00000000007ace30 PrintStackTraceSignalHandler(void*) /qdelacru/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc:632:1
 #2 0x00000000007aaded llvm::sys::RunSignalHandlers() /qdelacru/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/Signals.cpp:76:20
 #3 0x00000000007ac7c1 SignalHandler(int) /qdelacru/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc:407:1
 #4 0x00007f096604db20 __restore_rt (/lib64/libpthread.so.0+0x12b20)
 #5 0x00007f0964b307ff raise (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x377ff)
 #6 0x00007f0964b1ac35 abort (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x21c35)
 #7 0x00007f0964b1ab09 _nl_load_domain.cold.0 (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x21b09)
 #8 0x00007f0964b28de6 (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x2fde6)
 #9 0x0000000001004d1a clang::Preprocessor::setLoadedMacroDirective(clang::IdentifierInfo*, clang::MacroDirective*, clang::MacroDirective*) /qdelacru/llvm-project/clang/lib/Lex/PPMacroExpansion.cpp:116:5

An example of the code that causes the assert failure:
```
...
```

During code completion in clangd, the macros will be loaded in loadMainFilePreambleMacros() by iterating over the macro names and calling PreambleIdentifiers->get(). Since these macro names are store in a StringSet (has StringMap underlying container), the order of the iterator is not guaranteed to be same as the order seen in the source code.

When clangd is trying to resolve nested macros it sometimes attempts to load them out of order which causes a macro to be stored twice. In the example above, ECHO2 macro gets resolved first, but since it uses another macro that has not been resolved it will try to resolve/store that as well. Now there are two MacroDirectives stored in the Preprocessor, ECHO and ECHO2. When clangd tries to load the next macro, ECHO, the preprocessor fails an assert in clang::Preprocessor::setLoadedMacroDirective() because there is already a MacroDirective stored for that macro name.

In this diff, I check if the macro is already inside the IdentifierTable and if it is skip it so that it is not resolved twice.

Reviewed By: kadircet

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101870
@jacobly0 jacobly0 force-pushed the z80 branch 3 times, most recently from 560682a to a139def Compare August 11, 2021 05:49
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Aug 22, 2021
Change 636428c enabled BlockingRegion hooks for pthread_once().
Unfortunately this seems to cause crashes on Mac OS X which uses
pthread_once() from locations that seem to result in crashes:

| ThreadSanitizer:DEADLYSIGNAL
| ==31465==ERROR: ThreadSanitizer: stack-overflow on address 0x7ffee73fffd8 (pc 0x00010807fd2a bp 0x7ffee7400050 sp 0x7ffee73fffb0 T93815)
|     #0 __tsan::MetaMap::GetSync(__tsan::ThreadState*, unsigned long, unsigned long, bool, bool) tsan_sync.cpp:195 (libclang_rt.tsan_osx_dynamic.dylib:x86_64+0x78d2a)
|     #1 __tsan::MutexPreLock(__tsan::ThreadState*, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned int) tsan_rtl_mutex.cpp:143 (libclang_rt.tsan_osx_dynamic.dylib:x86_64+0x6cefc)
|     #2 wrap_pthread_mutex_lock sanitizer_common_interceptors.inc:4240 (libclang_rt.tsan_osx_dynamic.dylib:x86_64+0x3dae0)
|     #3 flockfile <null>:2 (libsystem_c.dylib:x86_64+0x38a69)
|     #4 puts <null>:2 (libsystem_c.dylib:x86_64+0x3f69b)
|     #5 wrap_puts sanitizer_common_interceptors.inc (libclang_rt.tsan_osx_dynamic.dylib:x86_64+0x34d83)
|     #6 __tsan::OnPotentiallyBlockingRegionBegin() cxa_guard_acquire.cpp:8 (foo:x86_64+0x100000e48)
|     #7 wrap_pthread_once tsan_interceptors_posix.cpp:1512 (libclang_rt.tsan_osx_dynamic.dylib:x86_64+0x2f6e6)

From the stack trace it can be seen that the caller is unknown, and the
resulting stack-overflow seems to indicate that whoever the caller is
does not have enough stack space or otherwise is running in a limited
environment not yet ready for full instrumentation.

Fix it by reverting behaviour on Mac OS X to not call BlockingRegion
hooks from pthread_once().

Reported-by: azharudd

Reviewed By: glider

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108305
@jacobly0 jacobly0 force-pushed the z80 branch 3 times, most recently from 0832f55 to 55bc950 Compare January 30, 2022 23:05
@jacobly0
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Unfortunately can't be merged until AsmParser is actually written.

@jacobly0 jacobly0 closed this Jan 31, 2022
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Feb 8, 2022
We experienced some deadlocks when we used multiple threads for logging
using `scan-builds` intercept-build tool when we used multiple threads by
e.g. logging `make -j16`

```
(gdb) bt
#0  0x00007f2bb3aff110 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
#1  0x00007f2bb3af70a3 in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
#2  0x00007f2bb3d152e4 in ?? ()
#3  0x00007ffcc5f0cc80 in ?? ()
#4  0x00007f2bb3d2bf5b in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
#5  0x00007f2bb3b5da27 in ?? () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
#6  0x00007f2bb3b5dbe0 in exit () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
#7  0x00007f2bb3d144ee in ?? ()
#8  0x746e692f706d742f in ?? ()
#9  0x692d747065637265 in ?? ()
#10 0x2f653631326b3034 in ?? ()
#11 0x646d632e35353532 in ?? ()
#12 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
```

I think the gcc's exit call caused the injected `libear.so` to be unloaded
by the `ld`, which in turn called the `void on_unload() __attribute__((destructor))`.
That tried to acquire an already locked mutex which was left locked in the
`bear_report_call()` call, that probably encountered some error and
returned early when it forgot to unlock the mutex.

All of these are speculation since from the backtrace I could not verify
if frames 2 and 3 are in fact corresponding to the `libear.so` module.
But I think it's a fairly safe bet.

So, hereby I'm releasing the held mutex on *all paths*, even if some failure
happens.

PS: I would use lock_guards, but it's C.

Reviewed-by: NoQ

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118439
nebulatgs pushed a commit to nebulatgs/llvm-project that referenced this pull request Mar 23, 2022
We experienced some deadlocks when we used multiple threads for logging
using `scan-builds` intercept-build tool when we used multiple threads by
e.g. logging `make -j16`

```
(gdb) bt
#0  0x00007f2bb3aff110 in __lll_lock_wait () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
jacobly0#1  0x00007f2bb3af70a3 in pthread_mutex_lock () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0
jacobly0#2  0x00007f2bb3d152e4 in ?? ()
jacobly0#3  0x00007ffcc5f0cc80 in ?? ()
jacobly0#4  0x00007f2bb3d2bf5b in ?? () from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
jacobly0#5  0x00007f2bb3b5da27 in ?? () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
jacobly0#6  0x00007f2bb3b5dbe0 in exit () from /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
jacobly0#7  0x00007f2bb3d144ee in ?? ()
jacobly0#8  0x746e692f706d742f in ?? ()
jacobly0#9  0x692d747065637265 in ?? ()
jacobly0#10 0x2f653631326b3034 in ?? ()
jacobly0#11 0x646d632e35353532 in ?? ()
jacobly0#12 0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
```

I think the gcc's exit call caused the injected `libear.so` to be unloaded
by the `ld`, which in turn called the `void on_unload() __attribute__((destructor))`.
That tried to acquire an already locked mutex which was left locked in the
`bear_report_call()` call, that probably encountered some error and
returned early when it forgot to unlock the mutex.

All of these are speculation since from the backtrace I could not verify
if frames 2 and 3 are in fact corresponding to the `libear.so` module.
But I think it's a fairly safe bet.

So, hereby I'm releasing the held mutex on *all paths*, even if some failure
happens.

PS: I would use lock_guards, but it's C.

Reviewed-by: NoQ

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118439

(cherry picked from commit d919d02)
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Aug 22, 2024
…104523)

Compilers and language runtimes often use helper functions that are
fundamentally uninteresting when debugging anything but the
compiler/runtime itself. This patch introduces a user-extensible
mechanism that allows for these frames to be hidden from backtraces and
automatically skipped over when navigating the stack with `up` and
`down`.

This does not affect the numbering of frames, so `f <N>` will still
provide access to the hidden frames. The `bt` output will also print a
hint that frames have been hidden.

My primary motivation for this feature is to hide thunks in the Swift
programming language, but I'm including an example recognizer for
`std::function::operator()` that I wished for myself many times while
debugging LLDB.

rdar://126629381


Example output. (Yes, my proof-of-concept recognizer could hide even
more frames if we had a method that returned the function name without
the return type or I used something that isn't based off regex, but it's
really only meant as an example).

before:
```
(lldb) thread backtrace --filtered=false
* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = breakpoint 1.1
  * frame #0: 0x0000000100001f04 a.out`foo(x=1, y=1) at main.cpp:4:10
    frame #1: 0x0000000100003a00 a.out`decltype(std::declval<int (*&)(int, int)>()(std::declval<int>(), std::declval<int>())) std::__1::__invoke[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__f=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:149:25
    frame #2: 0x000000010000399c a.out`int std::__1::__invoke_void_return_wrapper<int, false>::__call[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__args=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:216:12
    frame #3: 0x0000000100003968 a.out`std::__1::__function::__alloc_func<int (*)(int, int), std::__1::allocator<int (*)(int, int)>, int (int, int)>::operator()[abi:se200000](this=0x000000016fdff280, __arg=0x000000016fdff224, __arg=0x000000016fdff220) at function.h:171:12
    frame #4: 0x00000001000026bc a.out`std::__1::__function::__func<int (*)(int, int), std::__1::allocator<int (*)(int, int)>, int (int, int)>::operator()(this=0x000000016fdff278, __arg=0x000000016fdff224, __arg=0x000000016fdff220) at function.h:313:10
    frame #5: 0x0000000100003c38 a.out`std::__1::__function::__value_func<int (int, int)>::operator()[abi:se200000](this=0x000000016fdff278, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) const at function.h:430:12
    frame #6: 0x0000000100002038 a.out`std::__1::function<int (int, int)>::operator()(this= Function = foo(int, int) , __arg=1, __arg=1) const at function.h:989:10
    frame #7: 0x0000000100001f64 a.out`main(argc=1, argv=0x000000016fdff4f8) at main.cpp:9:10
    frame #8: 0x0000000183cdf154 dyld`start + 2476
(lldb) 
```

after

```
(lldb) bt
* thread #1, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = breakpoint 1.1
  * frame #0: 0x0000000100001f04 a.out`foo(x=1, y=1) at main.cpp:4:10
    frame #1: 0x0000000100003a00 a.out`decltype(std::declval<int (*&)(int, int)>()(std::declval<int>(), std::declval<int>())) std::__1::__invoke[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__f=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:149:25
    frame #2: 0x000000010000399c a.out`int std::__1::__invoke_void_return_wrapper<int, false>::__call[abi:se200000]<int (*&)(int, int), int, int>(__args=0x000000016fdff280, __args=0x000000016fdff224, __args=0x000000016fdff220) at invoke.h:216:12
    frame #6: 0x0000000100002038 a.out`std::__1::function<int (int, int)>::operator()(this= Function = foo(int, int) , __arg=1, __arg=1) const at function.h:989:10
    frame #7: 0x0000000100001f64 a.out`main(argc=1, argv=0x000000016fdff4f8) at main.cpp:9:10
    frame #8: 0x0000000183cdf154 dyld`start + 2476
Note: Some frames were hidden by frame recognizers
```
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Sep 9, 2024
…lvm#107294)

Random testing revealed it's possible to crash the analyzer with the
command line invocation:

clang -cc1 -analyze -analyzer-checker=nullability empty.c

where the source file, empty.c is an empty source file.

```
clang: <root>/clang/lib/StaticAnalyzer/Core/CheckerManager.cpp:56:
   void clang::ento::CheckerManager::finishedCheckerRegistration():
     Assertion `Event.second.HasDispatcher && "No dispatcher registered for an event"' failed.

PLEASE submit a bug report to https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/

Stack dump:
0.      Program arguments: clang -cc1 -analyze -analyzer-checker=nullability nullability-nocrash.c
 #0 ...
 ...
 #7 <addr> clang::ento::CheckerManager::finishedCheckerRegistration()
 #8 <addr> clang::ento::CheckerManager::CheckerManager(clang::ASTContext&,
             clang::AnalyzerOptions&, clang::Preprocessor const&,
             llvm::ArrayRef<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>,
             std::allocator<char>>>, llvm::ArrayRef<std::function<void (clang::ento::CheckerRegistry&)>>)
```

This commit removes the assertion which failed here, because it was
logically incorrect: it required that if an Event is handled by some
(enabled) checker, then there must be an **enabled** checker which can
emit that kind of Event. It should be OK to disable the event-producing
checkers but enable an event-consuming checker which has different
responsibilities in addition to handling the events.
 
Note that this assertion was in an `#ifndef NDEBUG` block, so this
change does not impact the non-debug builds.

Co-authored-by: Vince Bridgers <[email protected]>
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Sep 20, 2024
When SPARC Asan testing is enabled by PR llvm#107405, many Linux/sparc64
tests just hang like
```
#0  0xf7ae8e90 in syscall () from /usr/lib32/libc.so.6
#1  0x701065e8 in __sanitizer::FutexWait(__sanitizer::atomic_uint32_t*, unsigned int) ()
    at compiler-rt/lib/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_linux.cpp:766
#2  0x70107c90 in Wait ()
    at compiler-rt/lib/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_mutex.cpp:35
#3  0x700f7cac in Lock ()
    at compiler-rt/lib/asan/../sanitizer_common/sanitizer_mutex.h:196
#4  Lock ()
    at compiler-rt/lib/asan/../sanitizer_common/sanitizer_thread_registry.h:98
#5  LockThreads ()
    at compiler-rt/lib/asan/asan_thread.cpp:489
#6  0x700e9c8c in __asan::BeforeFork() ()
    at compiler-rt/lib/asan/asan_posix.cpp:157
#7  0xf7ac83f4 in ?? () from /usr/lib32/libc.so.6
Backtrace stopped: previous frame identical to this frame (corrupt stack?)
```
It turns out that this happens in tests using `internal_fork` (e.g.
invoking `llvm-symbolizer`): unlike most other Linux targets, which use
`clone`, Linux/sparc64 has to use `__fork` instead. While `clone`
doesn't trigger `pthread_atfork` handlers, `__fork` obviously does,
causing the hang.

To avoid this, this patch disables `InstallAtForkHandler` and lets the
ASan tests run to completion.

Tested on `sparc64-unknown-linux-gnu`.
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Nov 20, 2024
…onger cause a crash (llvm#116569)

This PR fixes a bug introduced by llvm#110199, which causes any half float
argument to crash the compiler on MIPS64.

Currently compiling this bit of code with `llc -mtriple=mips64`: 
```
define void @half_args(half %a) nounwind {
entry:
        ret void
}
```

Crashes with the following log:
```
LLVM ERROR: unable to allocate function argument #0
PLEASE submit a bug report to https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/ and include the crash backtrace.
Stack dump:
0.	Program arguments: llc -mtriple=mips64
1.	Running pass 'Function Pass Manager' on module '<stdin>'.
2.	Running pass 'MIPS DAG->DAG Pattern Instruction Selection' on function '@half_args'
 #0 0x000055a3a4013df8 llvm::sys::PrintStackTrace(llvm::raw_ostream&, int) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x32d0df8)
 #1 0x000055a3a401199e llvm::sys::RunSignalHandlers() (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x32ce99e)
 #2 0x000055a3a40144a8 SignalHandler(int) Signals.cpp:0:0
 #3 0x00007f00bde558c0 __restore_rt libc_sigaction.c:0:0
 #4 0x00007f00bdea462c __pthread_kill_implementation ./nptl/pthread_kill.c:44:76
 #5 0x00007f00bde55822 gsignal ./signal/../sysdeps/posix/raise.c:27:6
 #6 0x00007f00bde3e4af abort ./stdlib/abort.c:81:7
 #7 0x000055a3a3f80e3c llvm::report_fatal_error(llvm::Twine const&, bool) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x323de3c)
 #8 0x000055a3a2e20dfa (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x20dddfa)
 #9 0x000055a3a2a34e20 llvm::MipsTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments(llvm::SDValue, unsigned int, bool, llvm::SmallVectorImpl<llvm::ISD::InputArg> const&, llvm::SDLoc const&, llvm::SelectionDAG&, llvm::SmallVectorImpl<llvm::SDValue>&) const MipsISelLowering.cpp:0:0
#10 0x000055a3a3d896a9 llvm::SelectionDAGISel::LowerArguments(llvm::Function const&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x30466a9)
#11 0x000055a3a3e0b3ec llvm::SelectionDAGISel::SelectAllBasicBlocks(llvm::Function const&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x30c83ec)
#12 0x000055a3a3e09e21 llvm::SelectionDAGISel::runOnMachineFunction(llvm::MachineFunction&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x30c6e21)
#13 0x000055a3a2aae1ca llvm::MipsDAGToDAGISel::runOnMachineFunction(llvm::MachineFunction&) MipsISelDAGToDAG.cpp:0:0
#14 0x000055a3a3e07706 llvm::SelectionDAGISelLegacy::runOnMachineFunction(llvm::MachineFunction&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x30c4706)
#15 0x000055a3a3051ed6 llvm::MachineFunctionPass::runOnFunction(llvm::Function&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x230eed6)
#16 0x000055a3a35a3ec9 llvm::FPPassManager::runOnFunction(llvm::Function&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x2860ec9)
#17 0x000055a3a35ac3b2 llvm::FPPassManager::runOnModule(llvm::Module&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x28693b2)
#18 0x000055a3a35a499c llvm::legacy::PassManagerImpl::run(llvm::Module&) (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x286199c)
#19 0x000055a3a262abbb main (/home/davide/Ps2/rps2-tools/prefix/bin/llc+0x18e7bbb)
#20 0x00007f00bde3fc4c __libc_start_call_main ./csu/../sysdeps/nptl/libc_start_call_main.h:74:3
#21 0x00007f00bde3fd05 call_init ./csu/../csu/libc-start.c:128:20
#22 0x00007f00bde3fd05 __libc_start_main@GLIBC_2.2.5 ./csu/../csu/libc-start.c:347:5
#23 0x000055a3a2624921 _start /builddir/glibc-2.39/csu/../sysdeps/x86_64/start.S:117:0
```

This is caused by the fact that after the change, `f16`s are no longer
lowered as `f32`s in calls.

Two possible fixes are available:
- Update calling conventions to properly support passing `f16` as
integers.
- Update `useFPRegsForHalfType()` to return `true` so that `f16` are
still kept in `f32` registers, as before llvm#110199.

This PR implements the first solution to not introduce any more ABI
changes as llvm#110199 already did.

As of what is the correct ABI for halfs, I don't think there is a
correct answer. GCC doesn't support halfs on MIPS, and I couldn't find
any information on old MIPS ABI manuals either.
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Nov 29, 2024
…abort (llvm#117603)

Hey guys, I found that Flang's built-in ABORT function is incomplete
when I was using it. Compared with gfortran's ABORT (which can both
abort and print out a backtrace), flang's ABORT implementation lacks the
function of printing out a backtrace. This feature is essential for
debugging and understanding the call stack at the failure point.

To solve this problem, I completed the "// TODO:" of the abort function,
and then implemented an additional built-in function BACKTRACE for
flang. After a brief reading of the relevant source code, I used
backtrace and backtrace_symbols in "execinfo.h" to quickly implement
this. But since I used the above two functions directly, my
implementation is slightly different from gfortran's implementation (in
the output, the function call stack before main is additionally output,
and the function line number is missing). In addition, since I used the
above two functions, I did not need to add -g to embed debug information
into the ELF file, but needed -rdynamic to ensure that the symbols are
added to the dynamic symbol table (so that the function name will be
printed out).

Here is a comparison of the output between gfortran 's backtrace and my
implementation:
gfortran's implemention output:
```
#0  0x557eb71f4184 in testfun2_
        at /home/hunter/plct/fortran/test.f90:5
#1  0x557eb71f4165 in testfun1_
        at /home/hunter/plct/fortran/test.f90:13
#2  0x557eb71f4192 in test_backtrace
        at /home/hunter/plct/fortran/test.f90:17
#3  0x557eb71f41ce in main
        at /home/hunter/plct/fortran/test.f90:18
```
my impelmention output:
```
Backtrace:
#0 ./test(_FortranABacktrace+0x32) [0x574f07efcf92]
#1 ./test(testfun2_+0x14) [0x574f07efc7b4]
#2 ./test(testfun1_+0xd) [0x574f07efc7cd]
#3 ./test(_QQmain+0x9) [0x574f07efc7e9]
#4 ./test(main+0x12) [0x574f07efc802]
#5 /usr/lib/libc.so.6(+0x25e08) [0x76954694fe08]
#6 /usr/lib/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0x8c) [0x76954694fecc]
#7 ./test(_start+0x25) [0x574f07efc6c5]
```
test program is:
```
function testfun2() result(err)
  implicit none
  integer :: err
  err = 1
  call backtrace
end function testfun2

subroutine testfun1()
  implicit none
  integer :: err
  integer :: testfun2

  err = testfun2()
end subroutine testfun1

program test_backtrace
  call testfun1()
end program test_backtrace
```
I am well aware of the importance of line numbers, so I am now working
on implementing line numbers (by parsing DWARF information) and
supporting cross-platform (Windows) support.
jacobly0 pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Dec 7, 2024
## Description

This PR fixes a segmentation fault that occurs when passing options
requiring arguments via `-Xopenmp-target=<triple>`. The issue was that
the function `Driver::getOffloadArchs` did not properly parse the
extracted option, but instead assumed it was valid, leading to a crash
when incomplete arguments were provided.

## Backtrace

```sh
llvm-project/build/bin/clang++ main.cpp -fopenmp=libomp -fopenmp-targets=powerpc64le-ibm-linux-gnu -Xopenmp-target=powerpc64le-ibm-linux-gnu -o 
PLEASE submit a bug report to https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/ and include the crash backtrace, preprocessed source, and associated run script.
Stack dump:
0.      Program arguments: llvm-project/build/bin/clang++ main.cpp -fopenmp=libomp -fopenmp-targets=powerpc64le-ibm-linux-gnu -Xopenmp-target=powerpc64le-ibm-linux-gnu -o
1.      Compilation construction
2.      Building compilation actions
 #0 0x0000562fb21c363b llvm::sys::PrintStackTrace(llvm::raw_ostream&, int) (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0x392f63b)
 #1 0x0000562fb21c0e3c SignalHandler(int) Signals.cpp:0:0
 #2 0x00007fcbf6c81420 __restore_rt (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0+0x14420)
 #3 0x0000562fb1fa5d70 llvm::opt::Option::matches(llvm::opt::OptSpecifier) const (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0x3711d70)
 #4 0x0000562fb2a78e7d clang::driver::Driver::getOffloadArchs(clang::driver::Compilation&, llvm::opt::DerivedArgList const&, clang::driver::Action::OffloadKind, clang::driver::ToolChain const*, bool) const (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0x41e4e7d)
 #5 0x0000562fb2a7a9aa clang::driver::Driver::BuildOffloadingActions(clang::driver::Compilation&, llvm::opt::DerivedArgList&, std::pair<clang::driver::types::ID, llvm::opt::Arg const*> const&, clang::driver::Action*) const (.part.1164) Driver.cpp:0:0
 #6 0x0000562fb2a7c093 clang::driver::Driver::BuildActions(clang::driver::Compilation&, llvm::opt::DerivedArgList&, llvm::SmallVector<std::pair<clang::driver::types::ID, llvm::opt::Arg const*>, 16u> const&, llvm::SmallVector<clang::driver::Action*, 3u>&) const (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0x41e8093)
 #7 0x0000562fb2a8395d clang::driver::Driver::BuildCompilation(llvm::ArrayRef<char const*>) (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0x41ef95d)
 #8 0x0000562faf92684c clang_main(int, char**, llvm::ToolContext const&) (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0x109284c)
 #9 0x0000562faf826cc6 main (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0xf92cc6)
#10 0x00007fcbf6699083 __libc_start_main /build/glibc-LcI20x/glibc-2.31/csu/../csu/libc-start.c:342:3
#11 0x0000562faf923a5e _start (llvm-project/build/bin/clang+++0x108fa5e)
[1]    2628042 segmentation fault (core dumped)   main.cpp -fopenmp=libomp -fopenmp-targets=powerpc64le-ibm-linux-gnu  -o
```
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