Chris Lattner
2014-Jan-03 22:04 UTC
[LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] Goal for 3.5: Library-friendly headers
On Jan 3, 2014, at 1:55 PM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> wrote:> > > > The key thing then is to make sure that it's safe to enable the > > assertions in the headers if an application is built with !NDEBUG and > > linked against an NDEBUG version of LLVM. > > Sounds great. I'm pretty confident that there will be no problems - in practice - from any ODR violations that might arise from "assert" differing across library boundaries. We would want some pretty strong practical justification for breaking away from standard assert. > > Sorry to dig up this thread, but when re-reading it, I was surprised that everyone seems to think this will be easily done across all of LLVM. > > How can we support AssertingVH, which behaves as a POD-like struct around a pointer in NDEBUG, and as a class with significant (important) functionality to implement asserts on dangling value handles in !NDEBUG builds? > > While having different components of LLVM and consumers of LLVM able to intermix NDEBUG and !NDEBUG built code freely without ABI issues is nice-to-have in my book, the functionality provided by AssertingVH is significantly more nice-to-have, and I don't see any easy ways to contain or limit the exposure of this facility to library-level consumers.I hadn’t considered AssertVH, and I agree that losing it isn’t an option. Would it be possible to redesign AssertVH to be non-ABI fragile across debug/release builds? I haven’t looked at it recently, but maybe it could be a pointer to a CallbackVH in the debug mode, or a PointerUnion<rawpointer, callbackvh> or something.> We also have quite a few places in LLVM today that conserve memory usage in non-assert builds by removing unnecessary members of classes. We can say that this makes the ABI more fragile, but it is a valuable space optimization. Chris, are you saying to strongly believe that these should only be allowed for classes that are not visible in the C++ API? I find that surprising, as LLVM has historically prioritized efficiency and developer tools over ABI stability in our C++ APIs. Build-level instability is certainly a different beast from version stability, but I wanted to make sure the ramifications of this shift were being considered by everyone. (They hadn't by me.)Do you have any specific examples in mind? -Chris -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140103/d061eb1c/attachment.html>
Chandler Carruth
2014-Jan-03 22:19 UTC
[LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] Goal for 3.5: Library-friendly headers
On Fri, Jan 3, 2014 at 5:04 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at apple.com> wrote:> On Jan 3, 2014, at 1:55 PM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> wrote: > > > >> > The key thing then is to make sure that it's safe to enable the >> > assertions in the headers if an application is built with !NDEBUG and >> > linked against an NDEBUG version of LLVM. >> >> Sounds great. I'm pretty confident that there will be no problems - in >> practice - from any ODR violations that might arise from "assert" differing >> across library boundaries. We would want some pretty strong practical >> justification for breaking away from standard assert. > > > Sorry to dig up this thread, but when re-reading it, I was surprised that > everyone seems to think this will be easily done across all of LLVM. > > How can we support AssertingVH, which behaves as a POD-like struct around > a pointer in NDEBUG, and as a class with significant (important) > functionality to implement asserts on dangling value handles in !NDEBUG > builds? > > While having different components of LLVM and consumers of LLVM able to > intermix NDEBUG and !NDEBUG built code freely without ABI issues is > nice-to-have in my book, the functionality provided by AssertingVH is > significantly more nice-to-have, and I don't see any easy ways to contain > or limit the exposure of this facility to library-level consumers. > > > I hadn’t considered AssertVH, and I agree that losing it isn’t an option. > > Would it be possible to redesign AssertVH to be non-ABI fragile across > debug/release builds? I haven’t looked at it recently, but maybe it could > be a pointer to a CallbackVH in the debug mode, or a > PointerUnion<rawpointer, callbackvh> or something. >If you want methods to still be inlined in the non-assert case, you still have an ABI break in how you interpret the pointer...> > We also have quite a few places in LLVM today that conserve memory usage > in non-assert builds by removing unnecessary members of classes. We can say > that this makes the ABI more fragile, but it is a valuable space > optimization. Chris, are you saying to strongly believe that these should > only be allowed for classes that are not visible in the C++ API? I find > that surprising, as LLVM has historically prioritized efficiency and > developer tools over ABI stability in our C++ APIs. Build-level instability > is certainly a different beast from version stability, but I wanted to make > sure the ramifications of this shift were being considered by everyone. > (They hadn't by me.) > > > Do you have any specific examples in mind? >Several passes do this, but currently they are hidden in a single TU. It would only become a problem if/when they had logic hoisted to an analysis. The best current example I found with a quick search is FunctionLoweringInfo, but maybe we could pay the cost there. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140103/1786124e/attachment.html>
Chris Lattner
2014-Jan-04 00:24 UTC
[LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] Goal for 3.5: Library-friendly headers
On Jan 3, 2014, at 2:19 PM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> wrote:>> While having different components of LLVM and consumers of LLVM able to intermix NDEBUG and !NDEBUG built code freely without ABI issues is nice-to-have in my book, the functionality provided by AssertingVH is significantly more nice-to-have, and I don't see any easy ways to contain or limit the exposure of this facility to library-level consumers. > > I hadn’t considered AssertVH, and I agree that losing it isn’t an option. > > Would it be possible to redesign AssertVH to be non-ABI fragile across debug/release builds? I haven’t looked at it recently, but maybe it could be a pointer to a CallbackVH in the debug mode, or a PointerUnion<rawpointer, callbackvh> or something. > > If you want methods to still be inlined in the non-assert case, you still have an ABI break in how you interpret the pointer... >I’m suggesting that AssertVH be redesigned: it could be a PointerUnion (in all build modes) and .o files which are built in debug mode would put a callback vh into it. Clients built in release mode would put a raw pointer in it. Release builds would pay some small cost to check the tag bit, but I think that would be acceptable. -Chris -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140103/c37f259e/attachment.html>
Apparently Analagous Threads
- [LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] Goal for 3.5: Library-friendly headers
- [LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] Goal for 3.5: Library-friendly headers
- [LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] Goal for 3.5: Library-friendly headers
- Should analyses be able to hold AssertingVH to IR? (related to PR28400)
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