[lldb-dev] [Release-testers] [7.0.0 Release] rc1 has been tagged

Dimitry Andric via lldb-dev lldb-dev at lists.llvm.org
Tue Aug 7 12:49:16 PDT 2018


On 6 Aug 2018, at 18:23, Hans Wennborg <hans at chromium.org> wrote:
> 
> On Sun, Aug 5, 2018 at 5:49 PM, Dimitry Andric <dimitry at andric.com> wrote:
>> On 3 Aug 2018, at 13:37, Hans Wennborg via Release-testers <release-testers at lists.llvm.org> wrote:
>>> 
>>> 7.0.0-rc1 was just tagged (from the branch at r338847).
...
> 
>> Hmm, I'm running into a rather nasty snag now on i386-freebsd11, due to our lack of atomic 64 bit primitives; Phase2's configure dies with:
>> 
>>    -- Performing Test HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB
>>    -- Performing Test HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB - Success
>>    -- Performing Test HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS64_WITHOUT_LIB
>>    -- Performing Test HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS64_WITHOUT_LIB - Failed
>>    -- Looking for __atomic_load_8 in atomic
>>    -- Looking for __atomic_load_8 in atomic - not found
...
>> Apparently, with clang 6.0 it didn't generate libcalls to atomic functions, but just put in cmpxchg8b's, I guess?  And with clang 7.0 this seems to have changed.
...
> Did you file a bug to track this? (Sorry if you already did, I haven't
> read through the list today.)

This is a regression caused by https://reviews.llvm.org/rL323281:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
r323281 | wmi | 2018-01-23 23:27:57 +0000 (Tue, 23 Jan 2018) | 12 lines

Adjust MaxAtomicInlineWidth for i386/i486 targets.

This is to fix the bug reported in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34347#c6.
Currently, all  MaxAtomicInlineWidth of x86-32 targets are set to 64. However,
i386 doesn't support any cmpxchg related instructions. i486 only supports cmpxchg.
So in this patch MaxAtomicInlineWidth is reset as follows:
For i386, the MaxAtomicInlineWidth should be 0 because no cmpxchg is supported.
For i486, the MaxAtomicInlineWidth should be 32 because it supports cmpxchg.
For others 32 bits x86 cpu, the MaxAtomicInlineWidth should be 64 because of cmpxchg8b.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42154
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I'm not sure whether we should report this as an LLVM bug though, since
the problem really lies with FreeBSD: we never had proper atomic
libcalls in our libc (at least the 64 bit ones for 32-bit x86), nor a
separate libatomic.

Before r323281, and with all released versions of clang to date, it
actually generated incorrect instructions for the default target CPU,
if you used the triple i386-unknown-freebsd, e.g.:

$ ~/obj/clang-323280/bin/clang -m32 -O2 -S atomic-test.cpp -o -
[...]
        pushl   %ebp
        movl    %esp, %ebp
        pushl   %ebx
        xorl    %eax, %eax
        xorl    %edx, %edx
        xorl    %ecx, %ecx
        xorl    %ebx, %ebx
        lock            cmpxchg8b       x
        xorl    %eax, %eax
        popl    %ebx
        popl    %ebp
        retl

After r323281, this is corrected:

$ ~/obj/clang-323281/bin/clang -m32 -O2 -S atomic-test.cpp -o -
[...]
        pushl   %ebp
        movl    %esp, %ebp
        pushl   $0
        pushl   $x
        calll   __atomic_load_8
        addl    $8, %esp
        xorl    %eax, %eax
        popl    %ebp
        retl

Targeting i586 or higher makes the cmpxchg8b come back:

$ ~/obj/clang-323281/bin/clang -m32 -march=i586 -O2 -S atomic-test.cpp -o -
[...]
        pushl   %ebp
        movl    %esp, %ebp
        pushl   %ebx
        xorl    %eax, %eax
        xorl    %edx, %edx
        xorl    %ecx, %ecx
        xorl    %ebx, %ebx
        lock            cmpxchg8b       x
        xorl    %eax, %eax
        popl    %ebx
        popl    %ebp
        retl

I think there are other scenarios where you could cause atomic libcalls
to appear, though, even if you target higher CPUs.

That said, we'll have to at least discuss this in the FreeBSD community,
since I think it is high time it is fixed on *that* side.

-Dimitry

-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: signature.asc
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 223 bytes
Desc: Message signed with OpenPGP
URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/attachments/20180807/98430a99/attachment.sig>


More information about the lldb-dev mailing list