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update from origin 2020-06-19 #5
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When parsing `let x: i8 += 1` the compiler interprets `i8` as a trait which makes it more complicated to do error recovery. More advanced error recovery is not implemented in this commit.
When `x` has large magnitude, `x + ((x * x) + 1.0).sqrt()` approaches `x + x.abs()`. For negative values of `x`, this leads to catastrophic cancellation, resulting in large errors or even 0 being passed to `ln`, producing incorrect results including `-inf`. Becuase asinh is an odd function, i.e. -asinh(x) = asinh(-x) for all x, we can avoid the catastrophic cancellation and obtain correct results by taking the absolute value of `self` for the first term. `self * self` is always positive, so in effect this gives us `x.abs().asinh().copysign(x)` which as discussed above is algebraically equivalent, but is much more accurate.
This isn't sound without validation. We don't want to report errors in case of failure to intern and validate, we just don't want to const prop. Interning and const prop is not built for this, let's not do it until we have a clearer picture on aggregate propagation.
Add needs-sanitizer-{address,leak,memory,thread} directive indicating that test requires target with support for specific sanitizer. This is an addition to the existing needs-sanitizer-support directive indicating that test requires a sanitizer runtime library.
Do not suggest new type param when encountering a missing type in an ADT field with generic parameters. Fix #72640.
`crt-static` is a rust specific target feature that's absent from llvm feature table, adding it there.
This should run much faster. There are also some drive-by cleanups here to try to simplify things. Also, the paths for in-tree crates are now displayed as relative in `x.py test -h -v`.
This can live inside FnCtxt rather than ConfirmContext, and would be useful for other operations as well.
Enabling static-pie for musl and make it the default for the x86_64-unknown-linux-musl target This is a quick implementation for #70693 Opening it as a draft PR to gather some feedback, before I put more work in it. ```console ❯ cat hello.rs fn main() { println!("main = {:#x}", &main as *const _ as usize); } ❯ /tmp/rust-musl/bin/rustc --target x86_64-unknown-linux-musl ~/hello.rs ❯ ldd hello statically linked ❯ file hello hello: ELF 64-bit LSB shared object, x86-64, version 1 (GNU/Linux), statically linked, BuildID[sha1]=fec5cdc170f503a712a63a6958691ce5ce433654, with debug_info, not stripped ❯ ./hello main = 0x7f233ca30008 ❯ ./hello main = 0x7f9ddc529008 ❯ ./hello main = 0x7f1e5a224008 ❯ ./hello main = 0x7f4485c7c008 ❯ /tmp/rust-musl/bin/rustc --target x86_64-unknown-linux-musl -Z print-link-args ~/hello.rs "cc" "-Wl,--as-needed" "-Wl,-z,noexecstack" "-Wl,--eh-frame-hdr" "-m64" "-nostdlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/rcrt1.o" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/crti.o" "-L" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib" "hello.hello.7rcbfp3g-cgu.0.rcgu.o" "hello.hello.7rcbfp3g-cgu.1.rcgu.o" "hello.hello.7rcbfp3g-cgu.2.rcgu.o" "hello.hello.7rcbfp3g-cgu.3.rcgu.o" "hello.hello.7rcbfp3g-cgu.4.rcgu.o" "hello.hello.7rcbfp3g-cgu.5.rcgu.o" "-o" "hello" "hello.1nxjf9so94czdgcz.rcgu.o" "-Wl,--gc-sections" "-static-pie" "-Wl,-zrelro" "-Wl,-znow" "-nodefaultlibs" "-L" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib" "-Wl,--start-group" "-Wl,-Bstatic" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libstd-0f9cb7646f9e2c34.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libpanic_unwind-ba857f2f2e4e7187.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libhashbrown-58ba5e25bbdf9d29.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/librustc_std_workspace_alloc-886bfe43afa847dc.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libbacktrace-fbfb8fe99f19a67b.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libbacktrace_sys-85fa859e7d364cc9.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/librustc_demangle-07ab026cd3ec0d82.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libunwind-a8ec5932d92ea864.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libcfg_if-0ba4cc2f38a198d5.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/liblibc-c1bb2b3ce4f78b7c.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/liballoc-0ff673c1cf0d451a.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/librustc_std_workspace_core-c8ff2001db856926.rlib" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libcore-2ae14177140eeca2.rlib" "-Wl,--end-group" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/libcompiler_builtins-4fd81b5ce1b08a9c.rlib" "-static" "-Wl,-Bdynamic" "/tmp/rust-musl/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/lib/crtn.o" ``` Closes #70693 Closes #53968
… r=matthewjasper,nikomatsakis Report error when casting an C-like enum implementing Drop Following approach described in #35941
Fix asinh of negative values Rust's current implementation of asinh has [large errors](https://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=arcsinh%28x%29%2C+ln%28x%2B%28x%5E2%2B1%29%5E0.5%29%2C+x+from+-67452095.07139316+to+0) in its negative range. ~These are (mostly) not numerical, but rather seem due to an incorrect implementation.~ This appears to be due to avoidable catastrophic cancellation. [Playground before/after](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&gist=bd04ae6d86d06612e4e389a8b95d19ab). [glibc uses](https://github.com/bminor/glibc/blob/81dca813cc35f91414731fdd0ff6b756d5e1827f/sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64/s_asinh.c#L56) abs here. Many thanks to @danieldeankon for finding this weird behavior, @jebrosen for diagnosing it, and @toasteater for identifying the probable implementation error!
tag/niche terminology cleanup The term "discriminant" was used in two ways throughout the compiler: * every enum variant has a corresponding discriminant, that can be given explicitly with `Variant = N`. * that discriminant is then encoded in memory to store which variant is active -- but this encoded form of the discriminant was also often called "discriminant", even though it is conceptually quite different (e.g., it can be smaller in size, or even use niche-filling). After discussion with @eddyb, this renames the second term to "tag". The way the tag is encoded can be either `TagEncoding::Direct` (formerly `DiscriminantKind::Tag`) or `TagEncoding::Niche` (formerly `DiscrimianntKind::Niche`). This finally resolves some long-standing confusion I had about the handling of variant indices and discriminants, which surfaced in #72419. (There is also a `DiscriminantKind` type in libcore, it remains unaffected. I think this corresponds to the discriminant, not the tag, so that seems all right.) r? @eddyb
…Simulacrum Create self-contained directory and move there some of external binaries/libs One of the steps to reach design described in #68887 (comment) This PR moves things around and allows link code to handle the new directory structure.
…henkov Disallow loading crates with non-ascii identifier name. This turns off external crate loading with non-ascii identifier names. cc #55467.
Add rust specific features to print target features Fixes #71583 `crt-static` is a rust specific target feature that's absent from llvm feature table, adding it there so that it shows under `rustc --print target-features`. Probably the most native implementation I could think of, would love to get feedback.
Test that bounds checks are elided when slice len is checked up-front Closes #69101
Reduce pointer casts in Box::into_boxed_slice We only need to cast the pointer once to change `Box<T>` to an array `Box<[T; 1]>`, then we can let unsized coercion return `Box<[T]>`.
…schievink Document format correction Minor amendments to the document. r? @steveklabnik
Minor tweaks to liballoc
Rollup of 13 pull requests Successful merges: - #70740 (Enabling static-pie for musl) - #72331 (Report error when casting an C-like enum implementing Drop) - #72486 (Fix asinh of negative values) - #72497 (tag/niche terminology cleanup) - #72999 (Create self-contained directory and move there some of external binaries/libs) - #73130 (Remove const prop for indirects) - #73142 (Ensure std benchmarks get tested.) - #73305 (Disallow loading crates with non-ascii identifier name.) - #73346 (Add rust specific features to print target features) - #73362 (Test that bounds checks are elided when slice len is checked up-front) - #73459 (Reduce pointer casts in Box::into_boxed_slice) - #73464 (Document format correction) - #73479 (Minor tweaks to liballoc) Failed merges: r? @ghost
Fix up autoderef when reborrowing Currently `(f)()` and `f.call_mut()` behaves differently if expression `f` contains autoderef in it. This causes a weird error in #72225. When `f` is type checked, `Deref` is used (this is expected as we can't yet determine if we should use `Fn` or `FnMut`). When subsequently we determine the actual trait to be used, when using the `f.call_mut()` syntax the `Deref` is patched to `DerefMut`, while for the `(f)()` syntax case it is not. This PR replicates the fixup for the first case. Fixes #72225 Fixes #68590
linker: MSVC supports linking static libraries as a whole archive
first stage of implementing LLVM code coverage This PR replaces #70680 (WIP toward LLVM Code Coverage for Rust) since I am re-implementing the Rust LLVM code coverage feature in a different part of the compiler (in MIR pass(es) vs AST). This PR updates rustc with `-Zinstrument-coverage` option that injects the llvm intrinsic `instrprof.increment()` for code generation. This initial version only injects counters at the top of each function, and does not yet implement the required coverage map. Upcoming PRs will add the coverage map, and add more counters and/or counter expressions for each conditional code branch. Rust compiler MCP rust-lang/compiler-team#278 Relevant issue: #34701 - Implement support for LLVMs code coverage instrumentation ***[I put together some development notes here, under a separate branch.](https://github.com/richkadel/rust/blob/cfa0b21d34ee64e4ebee226101bd2ef0c6757865/src/test/codegen/coverage-experiments/README-THIS-IS-TEMPORARY.md)***
compiletest: Add directives to detect sanitizer support Add needs-sanitizer-{address,leak,memory,thread} directive indicating that test requires target with support for specific sanitizer. This is an addition to the existing needs-sanitizer-support directive indicating that test requires a sanitizer runtime library. The existing needs-sanitizer-support directive could be incorporated into the new ones, but I decided to retain it, since it enables running sanitizer codegen tests even when building of sanitizer runtime libraries is disabled.
memory access sanity checks: abort instead of panic Suggested by @Mark-Simulacrum, this should help reduce the performance impact of these checks.
…rk-Simulacrum Change how compiler-builtins gets many CGUs This commit intends to fix an accidental regression from #70846. The goal of #70846 was to build compiler-builtins with a maximal number of CGUs to ensure that each module in the source corresponds to an object file. This high degree of control for compiler-builtins is desirable to ensure that there's at most one exported symbol per CGU, ideally enabling compiler-builtins to not conflict with the system libgcc as often. In #70846, however, only part of the compiler understands that compiler-builtins is built with many CGUs. The rest of the compiler thinks it's building with `sess.codegen_units()`. Notably the calculation of `sess.lto()` consults `sess.codegen_units()`, which when there's only one CGU it disables ThinLTO. This means that compiler-builtins is built without ThinLTO, which is quite harmful to performance! This is the root of the cause from #73135 where intrinsics were found to not be inlining trivial functions. The fix applied in this commit is to remove the special-casing of compiler-builtins in the compiler. Instead the build system is now responsible for special-casing compiler-builtins. It doesn't know exactly how many CGUs will be needed but it passes a large number that is assumed to be much greater than the number of source-level modules needed. After reading the various locations in the compiler source, this seemed like the best solution rather than adding more and more special casing in the compiler for compiler-builtins. Closes #73135
…imulacrum bootstrap: read config from $RUST_BOOTSTRAP_CONFIG This PR modifies bootstrap so that `config.toml` is read first from `RUST_BOOTSTRAP_CONFIG`, then `--config` and finally `config.toml` in the current directory. This is a subjective change, intended to improve the ergnomics when using "development shells" for rustc development (for example, using tools such as Nix) which set environment variables to ensure a reproducible environment (these development shells can then be version controlled, e.g. [my rustc shell](https://github.com/davidtwco/veritas/blob/6b74a5c170b6efb2c7b094352932f9158f97eec0/nix/shells/rustc.nix)). By optionally reading `config.toml` from an environment variable, a `config.toml` can be defined in the development shell and a path to it exposed in the `RUST_BOOTSTRAP_CONFIG` environment variable - avoiding the need to manually symlink the contents of this file to `config.toml` in the working directory.
…x, r=Mark-Simulacrum bootstrap/install.rs: support a nonexistent `prefix` in `x.py install` PR #49778 introduced fs::canonicalize() which fails for a nonexistent path. This is a surprise for someone used to GNU Autotools' configure which can create any necessary intermediate directories in prefix. This change makes it run fs::create_dir_all() before canonicalize().
Speed up bootstrap a little. The bootstrap script was calling `cargo metadata` 3 times (or 6 with `-v`). This is a very expensive operation, and this attempts to avoid the extra calls. On my system, a simple command like `./x.py test -h -v` goes from about 3 seconds to 0.4. An overview of the changes: - Call `cargo metadata` only once with `--no-deps`. Optional dependencies are filtered in `in_tree_crates` (handling `profiler_builtins` and `rustc_codegen_llvm` which are driven by the config). - Remove a duplicate call to `metadata::build` when using `-v`. I'm not sure why it was there, it looks like a mistake or vestigial from previous behavior. - Remove check for `_shim`, I believe all the `_shim` crates are now gone. - Remove check for `rustc_` and `*san` for `test::Crate::should_run`, these are no longer dependencies in the `test` tree. - Use relative paths in `./x.py test -h -v` output. - Some code cleanup (remove unnecessary `find_compiler_crates`, etc.). - Show suite paths (`src/test/ui/...`) in `./x.py test -h -v` output. - Some doc comments.
Rollup of 10 pull requests Successful merges: - #72280 (Fix up autoderef when reborrowing) - #72785 (linker: MSVC supports linking static libraries as a whole archive) - #73011 (first stage of implementing LLVM code coverage) - #73044 (compiletest: Add directives to detect sanitizer support) - #73054 (memory access sanity checks: abort instead of panic) - #73136 (Change how compiler-builtins gets many CGUs) - #73280 (Add E0763) - #73317 (bootstrap: read config from $RUST_BOOTSTRAP_CONFIG) - #73350 (bootstrap/install.rs: support a nonexistent `prefix` in `x.py install`) - #73352 (Speed up bootstrap a little.) Failed merges: r? @ghost
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This is a combination of 18 commits. Commit #2: Additional examples and some small improvements. Commit #3: fixed mir-opt non-mir extensions and spanview title elements Corrected a fairly recent assumption in runtest.rs that all MIR dump files end in .mir. (It was appending .mir to the graphviz .dot and spanview .html file names when generating blessed output files. That also left outdated files in the baseline alongside the files with the incorrect names, which I've now removed.) Updated spanview HTML title elements to match their content, replacing a hardcoded and incorrect name that was left in accidentally when originally submitted. Commit #4: added more test examples also improved Makefiles with support for non-zero exit status and to force validation of tests unless a specific test overrides it with a specific comment. Commit #5: Fixed rare issues after testing on real-world crate Commit #6: Addressed PR feedback, and removed temporary -Zexperimental-coverage -Zinstrument-coverage once again supports the latest capabilities of LLVM instrprof coverage instrumentation. Also fixed a bug in spanview. Commit #7: Fix closure handling, add tests for closures and inner items And cleaned up other tests for consistency, and to make it more clear where spans start/end by breaking up lines. Commit #8: renamed "typical" test results "expected" Now that the `llvm-cov show` tests are improved to normally expect matching actuals, and to allow individual tests to override that expectation. Commit #9: test coverage of inline generic struct function Commit #10: Addressed review feedback * Removed unnecessary Unreachable filter. * Replaced a match wildcard with remining variants. * Added more comments to help clarify the role of successors() in the CFG traversal Commit #11: refactoring based on feedback * refactored `fn coverage_spans()`. * changed the way I expand an empty coverage span to improve performance * fixed a typo that I had accidently left in, in visit.rs Commit #12: Optimized use of SourceMap and SourceFile Commit #13: Fixed a regression, and synched with upstream Some generated test file names changed due to some new change upstream. Commit #14: Stripping out crate disambiguators from demangled names These can vary depending on the test platform. Commit #15: Ignore llvm-cov show diff on test with generics, expand IO error message Tests with generics produce llvm-cov show results with demangled names that can include an unstable "crate disambiguator" (hex value). The value changes when run in the Rust CI Windows environment. I added a sed filter to strip them out (in a prior commit), but sed also appears to fail in the same environment. Until I can figure out a workaround, I'm just going to ignore this specific test result. I added a FIXME to follow up later, but it's not that critical. I also saw an error with Windows GNU, but the IO error did not specify a path for the directory or file that triggered the error. I updated the error messages to provide more info for next, time but also noticed some other tests with similar steps did not fail. Looks spurious. Commit #16: Modify rust-demangler to strip disambiguators by default Commit #17: Remove std::process::exit from coverage tests Due to Issue rust-lang#77553, programs that call std::process::exit() do not generate coverage results on Windows MSVC. Commit #18: fix: test file paths exceeding Windows max path len
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Don't run `resolve_vars_if_possible` in `normalize_erasing_regions` Neither `@eddyb` nor I could figure out what this was for. I changed it to `assert_eq!(normalized_value, infcx.resolve_vars_if_possible(&normalized_value));` and it passed the UI test suite. <details><summary> Outdated, I figured out the issue - `needs_infer()` needs to come _after_ erasing the lifetimes </summary> Strangely, if I change it to `assert!(!normalized_value.needs_infer())` it panics almost immediately: ``` query stack during panic: #0 [normalize_generic_arg_after_erasing_regions] normalizing `<str::IsWhitespace as str::pattern::Pattern>::Searcher` #1 [needs_drop_raw] computing whether `str::iter::Split<str::IsWhitespace>` needs drop #2 [mir_built] building MIR for `str::<impl str>::split_whitespace` #3 [unsafety_check_result] unsafety-checking `str::<impl str>::split_whitespace` #4 [mir_const] processing MIR for `str::<impl str>::split_whitespace` #5 [mir_promoted] processing `str::<impl str>::split_whitespace` #6 [mir_borrowck] borrow-checking `str::<impl str>::split_whitespace` #7 [analysis] running analysis passes on this crate end of query stack ``` I'm not entirely sure what's going on - maybe the two disagree? </details> For context, this came up while reviewing rust-lang#77467 (cc `@lcnr).` Possibly this needs a crater run? r? `@nikomatsakis` cc `@matthewjasper`
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HWAddressSanitizer support # Motivation Compared to regular ASan, HWASan has a [smaller overhead](https://source.android.com/devices/tech/debug/hwasan). The difference in practice is that HWASan'ed code is more usable, e.g. Android device compiled with HWASan can be used as a daily driver. # Example ``` fn main() { let xs = vec![0, 1, 2, 3]; let _y = unsafe { *xs.as_ptr().offset(4) }; } ``` ``` ==223==ERROR: HWAddressSanitizer: tag-mismatch on address 0xefdeffff0050 at pc 0xaaaad00b3468 READ of size 4 at 0xefdeffff0050 tags: e5/00 (ptr/mem) in thread T0 #0 0xaaaad00b3464 (/root/main+0x53464) #1 0xaaaad00b39b4 (/root/main+0x539b4) #2 0xaaaad00b3dd0 (/root/main+0x53dd0) #3 0xaaaad00b61dc (/root/main+0x561dc) #4 0xaaaad00c0574 (/root/main+0x60574) #5 0xaaaad00b6290 (/root/main+0x56290) #6 0xaaaad00b6170 (/root/main+0x56170) #7 0xaaaad00b3578 (/root/main+0x53578) #8 0xffff81345e70 (/lib64/libc.so.6+0x20e70) #9 0xaaaad0096310 (/root/main+0x36310) [0xefdeffff0040,0xefdeffff0060) is a small allocated heap chunk; size: 32 offset: 16 0xefdeffff0050 is located 0 bytes to the right of 16-byte region [0xefdeffff0040,0xefdeffff0050) allocated here: #0 0xaaaad009bcdc (/root/main+0x3bcdc) #1 0xaaaad00b1eb0 (/root/main+0x51eb0) #2 0xaaaad00b20d4 (/root/main+0x520d4) #3 0xaaaad00b2800 (/root/main+0x52800) #4 0xaaaad00b1cf4 (/root/main+0x51cf4) #5 0xaaaad00b33d4 (/root/main+0x533d4) #6 0xaaaad00b39b4 (/root/main+0x539b4) #7 0xaaaad00b61dc (/root/main+0x561dc) #8 0xaaaad00b3578 (/root/main+0x53578) #9 0xaaaad0096310 (/root/main+0x36310) Thread: T0 0xeffe00002000 stack: [0xffffc0590000,0xffffc0d90000) sz: 8388608 tls: [0xffff81521020,0xffff815217d0) Memory tags around the buggy address (one tag corresponds to 16 bytes): 0xfefcefffef80: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefcefffef90: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefcefffefa0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefcefffefb0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefcefffefc0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefcefffefd0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefcefffefe0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefcefffeff0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 =>0xfefceffff000: a2 a2 05 00 e5 [00] 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff020: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff040: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff050: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff060: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff070: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0xfefceffff080: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 Tags for short granules around the buggy address (one tag corresponds to 16 bytes): 0xfefcefffeff0: .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. =>0xfefceffff000: .. .. c5 .. .. [..] .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 0xfefceffff010: .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. See https://clang.llvm.org/docs/HardwareAssistedAddressSanitizerDesign.html#short-granules for a description of short granule tags Registers where the failure occurred (pc 0xaaaad00b3468): x0 e500efdeffff0050 x1 0000000000000004 x2 0000ffffc0d8f5a0 x3 0200efff00000000 x4 0000ffffc0d8f4c0 x5 000000000000004f x6 00000ffffc0d8f36 x7 0000efff00000000 x8 e500efdeffff0050 x9 0200efff00000000 x10 0000000000000000 x11 0200efff00000000 x12 0200effe000006b0 x13 0200effe000006b0 x14 0000000000000008 x15 00000000c00000cf x16 0000aaaad00a0afc x17 0000000000000003 x18 0000000000000001 x19 0000ffffc0d8f718 x20 ba00ffffc0d8f7a0 x21 0000aaaad00962e0 x22 0000000000000000 x23 0000000000000000 x24 0000000000000000 x25 0000000000000000 x26 0000000000000000 x27 0000000000000000 x28 0000000000000000 x29 0000ffffc0d8f650 x30 0000aaaad00b3468 ``` # Comments/Caveats * HWASan is only supported on arm64. * I'm not sure if I should add a feature gate or piggyback on the existing one for sanitizers. * HWASan requires `-C target-feature=+tagged-globals`. That flag should probably be set transparently to the user. Not sure how to go about that. # TODO * Need more tests. * Update documentation. * Fix symbolization. * Integrate with CI
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