Commit c65647d6 authored by Matthew Dempsky's avatar Matthew Dempsky Committed by Russ Cox

cmd/compile: handle unsafe.Pointer(f()) correctly

Previously statements like

    f(unsafe.Pointer(g()), int(h()))

would be reordered into a sequence of statements like

    autotmp_g := g()
    autotmp_h := h()
    f(unsafe.Pointer(autotmp_g), int(autotmp_h))

which can leave g's temporary value on the stack as a uintptr, rather
than an unsafe.Pointer. Instead, recognize uintptr-to-unsafe.Pointer
conversions when reordering function calls to instead produce:

    autotmp_g := unsafe.Pointer(g())
    autotmp_h := h()
    f(autotmp_g, int(autotmp_h))

Fixes #15329.

Change-Id: I2cdbd89d233d0d5c94791513a9fd5fd958d11ed5
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/22273
Run-TryBot: Matthew Dempsky <mdempsky@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: 's avatarKeith Randall <khr@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: 's avatarRuss Cox <rsc@golang.org>
parent c6a5b360
......@@ -1082,6 +1082,20 @@ func orderexpr(n *Node, order *Order, lhs *Node) *Node {
n.Left = orderaddrtemp(n.Left, order)
}
case OCONVNOP:
if n.Type.IsKind(TUNSAFEPTR) && n.Left.Type.IsKind(TUINTPTR) && (n.Left.Op == OCALLFUNC || n.Left.Op == OCALLINTER || n.Left.Op == OCALLMETH) {
// When reordering unsafe.Pointer(f()) into a separate
// statement, the conversion and function call must stay
// together. See golang.org/issue/15329.
orderinit(n.Left, order)
ordercall(n.Left, order)
if lhs == nil || lhs.Op != ONAME || instrumenting {
n = ordercopyexpr(n, n.Type, order, 0)
}
} else {
n.Left = orderexpr(n.Left, order, nil)
}
case OANDAND, OOROR:
mark := marktemp(order)
n.Left = orderexpr(n.Left, order, nil)
......
// run
// Copyright 2016 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Previously, cmd/compile would rewrite
//
// check(unsafe.Pointer(testMeth(1).Pointer()), unsafe.Pointer(testMeth(2).Pointer()))
//
// to
//
// var autotmp_1 uintptr = testMeth(1).Pointer()
// var autotmp_2 uintptr = testMeth(2).Pointer()
// check(unsafe.Pointer(autotmp_1), unsafe.Pointer(autotmp_2))
//
// However, that means autotmp_1 is the only reference to the int
// variable containing the value "1", but it's not a pointer type,
// so it was at risk of being garbage collected by the evaluation of
// testMeth(2).Pointer(), even though package unsafe's documentation
// says the original code was allowed.
//
// Now cmd/compile rewrites it to
//
// var autotmp_1 unsafe.Pointer = unsafe.Pointer(testMeth(1).Pointer())
// var autotmp_2 unsafe.Pointer = unsafe.Pointer(testMeth(2).Pointer())
// check(autotmp_1, autotmp_2)
//
// to ensure the pointed-to variables are visible to the GC.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"reflect"
"runtime"
"unsafe"
)
func main() {
// Test all the different ways we can invoke reflect.Value.Pointer.
// Direct method invocation.
check(unsafe.Pointer(testMeth(1).Pointer()), unsafe.Pointer(testMeth(2).Pointer()))
// Invocation via method expression.
check(unsafe.Pointer(reflect.Value.Pointer(testMeth(1))), unsafe.Pointer(reflect.Value.Pointer(testMeth(2))))
// Invocation via interface.
check(unsafe.Pointer(testInter(1).Pointer()), unsafe.Pointer(testInter(2).Pointer()))
// Invocation via method value.
check(unsafe.Pointer(testFunc(1)()), unsafe.Pointer(testFunc(2)()))
}
func check(p, q unsafe.Pointer) {
a, b := *(*int)(p), *(*int)(q)
if a != 1 || b != 2 {
fmt.Printf("got %v, %v; expected 1, 2\n", a, b)
}
}
func testMeth(x int) reflect.Value {
// Force GC to run.
runtime.GC()
return reflect.ValueOf(&x)
}
type Pointerer interface {
Pointer() uintptr
}
func testInter(x int) Pointerer {
return testMeth(x)
}
func testFunc(x int) func() uintptr {
return testMeth(x).Pointer
}
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