[llvm] Object: Don't error out on malformed bitcode files. (PR #96848)

James Henderson via llvm-commits llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org
Thu Jun 27 00:33:21 PDT 2024


================
@@ -482,16 +482,47 @@ static uint64_t computeHeadersSize(object::Archive::Kind Kind,
 }
 
 static Expected<std::unique_ptr<SymbolicFile>>
-getSymbolicFile(MemoryBufferRef Buf, LLVMContext &Context) {
+getSymbolicFile(MemoryBufferRef Buf, LLVMContext &Context,
+                object::Archive::Kind Kind) {
   const file_magic Type = identify_magic(Buf.getBuffer());
   // Don't attempt to read non-symbolic file types.
   if (!object::SymbolicFile::isSymbolicFile(Type, &Context))
     return nullptr;
   if (Type == file_magic::bitcode) {
     auto ObjOrErr = object::SymbolicFile::createSymbolicFile(
         Buf, file_magic::bitcode, &Context);
-    if (!ObjOrErr)
-      return ObjOrErr.takeError();
+    // An error reading a bitcode file most likely indicates that the file
+    // was created by a compiler from the future. Normally we don't try to
+    // implement forwards compatibility for bitcode files, but when creating an
+    // archive we can implement best-effort forwards compatibility by treating
+    // the file as a blob and not creating symbol index entries for it. lld and
+    // mold ignore the archive symbol index, so provided that you use one of
+    // these linkers, LTO will work as long as lld or the gold plugin is newer
+    // than the compiler. We only ignore errors if the archive format is one
+    // that is supported by a linker that is known to ignore the index,
+    // otherwise there's no chance of this working so we may as well error out.
+    // We print a warning on read failure so that users of linkers that rely on
+    // the symbol index can diagnose the issue.
+    //
+    // This is the same behavior as GNU ar when the linker plugin returns an
+    // error when reading the input file. If the bitcode file is actually
+    // malformed, it will be diagnosed at link time.
+    if (!ObjOrErr) {
+      switch (Kind) {
+      case object::Archive::K_BSD:
+      case object::Archive::K_GNU:
+      case object::Archive::K_GNU64:
+        llvm::logAllUnhandledErrors(ObjOrErr.takeError(), llvm::errs(),
----------------
jh7370 wrote:

I'm not keen on this warning being printed inside the library. This will prevent e.g. client tools treating the warning as an error. I would prefer one of two options:

1) Continue returning it up the stack, and report the warning further up (perhaps using something in the error code within the error to identify it as opposed to other genuine errors).

2) Pass in a callback function that is called when this case is hit. Client code can choose then to handle the error in whatever way it chooses.

https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/96848


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