o.j.sivart at gmail.com
2010-May-13 11:56 UTC
[LLVMdev] Handling of thread_local globals by llc -march=cpp
target triple = "i386-pc-linux-gnu" On 13/05/2010, at 9:25 PM, Anton Korobeynikov wrote:>> int (*FP)() = (int (*)())FPtr; >> int res = FP(); >> >> when the function executes correctly in the case of instead having created a standard global variable. > What is the platform you're running the code on? > > -- > With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov > Faculty of Mathematics and Mechanics, Saint Petersburg State University
o.j.sivart at gmail.com
2010-May-13 14:35 UTC
[LLVMdev] Handling of thread_local globals by llc -march=cpp
I note also that this is not a currently unsupported target case where an error should/could/would be produced on attempting to emit code with thread local references. I say this because clang is able to compile both c source with __thread on a global and bc containing a @variable = thread_local global ... and a function that references the thread local global variable to both assembly and machine code that has segment register offset addressing. On 13/05/2010, at 9:26 PM, o.j.sivart at gmail.com wrote:> target triple = "i386-pc-linux-gnu" > > On 13/05/2010, at 9:25 PM, Anton Korobeynikov wrote: > >>> int (*FP)() = (int (*)())FPtr; >>> int res = FP(); >>> >>> when the function executes correctly in the case of instead having created a standard global variable. >> What is the platform you're running the code on? >> >> -- >> With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov >> Faculty of Mathematics and Mechanics, Saint Petersburg State University >
Anton Korobeynikov
2010-May-13 19:53 UTC
[LLVMdev] Handling of thread_local globals by llc -march=cpp
> I note also that this is not a currently unsupported target case where an error should/could/would be produced on attempting to emit code with thread local references. I say this because clang is able to compile both c source with __thread on a global and bc containing a @variable = thread_local global ... and a function that references the thread local global variable to both assembly and machine code that has segment register offset addressing.Maybe TLS stuff is just broken inside JIT? -- With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov Faculty of Mathematics and Mechanics, Saint Petersburg State University
o.j.sivart at gmail.com
2010-May-14 00:21 UTC
[LLVMdev] Thread local global support in ExecutionEngine::getPointerToFunction() [was Re: Handling of thread_local globals by llc -march=cpp]
Hi all, Following on from "Handling of thread_local globals by llc -march=cpp" I thought I'd repost queries that lead on from this under a more appropriate new title. My query now is does ExecutionEngine::getPointerToFunction(), and related, support thread local global storage? Thread local storage is supported by clang, both in bc generation (it produces thread_local syntax), assembly generation (it produces segment register offset addressing), and machine code, thus LLVM clearly has working support for thread local global storage. However in the case of creating IR directly via calls into the LLVM api it appears that ExecutionEngine::getPointerToFunction() and related may not handle functions that reference thread local global storage. The reason I say this is captured in the details of one of my previous emails which are as follows. In my simple test program, replacing the following line of code: GlobalVariable* global = new GlobalVariable(*MyModule, IntegerType::get(getGlobalContext(), 32), false, GlobalValue::ExternalLinkage, 0, "global"); with the following line of code: GlobalVariable* global = new GlobalVariable(*MyModule, IntegerType::get(getGlobalContext(), 32), false, GlobalValue::ExternalLinkage, 0, "global", 0, true); in order to create a thread local global variable instead of a standard global variable causes the function (which uses the global) produced by the following line of code: void *FPtr = MyExecutionEngine->getPointerToFunction(MyFunction); to segfault when I call it in the following sequence of code: int (*FP)() = (int (*)())FPtr; int res = FP(); when the function executes correctly in the case of instead having created a standard global variable. On 14/05/2010, at 12:05 AM, o.j.sivart at gmail.com wrote:> I note also that this is not a currently unsupported target case where an error should/could/would be produced on attempting to emit code with thread local references. I say this because clang is able to compile both c source with __thread on a global and bc containing a @variable = thread_local global ... and a function that references the thread local global variable to both assembly and machine code that has segment register offset addressing. > > On 13/05/2010, at 9:26 PM, o.j.sivart at gmail.com wrote: > >> target triple = "i386-pc-linux-gnu" >> >> On 13/05/2010, at 9:25 PM, Anton Korobeynikov wrote: >> >>>> int (*FP)() = (int (*)())FPtr; >>>> int res = FP(); >>>> >>>> when the function executes correctly in the case of instead having created a standard global variable. >>> What is the platform you're running the code on? >>> >>> -- >>> With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov >>> Faculty of Mathematics and Mechanics, Saint Petersburg State University >> >
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