Segmented Stacks in LLVM
Introduction
Segmented stack allows stack space to be allocated incrementally than as amonolithic chunk (of some worst case size) at thread initialization. This isdone by allocating stack blocks (henceforth called stacklets) and linking theminto a doubly linked list. The function prologue is responsible for checking ifthe current stacklet has enough space for the function to execute; and if not,call into the libgcc runtime to allocate more stack space. Segmented stacks areenabled with the "split-stack"
attribute on LLVM functions.
The runtime functionality is already there in libgcc.
Implementation Details
Allocating Stacklets
As mentioned above, the function prologue checks if the current stacklet hasenough space. The current approach is to use a slot in the TCB to store thecurrent stack limit (minus the amount of space needed to allocate a new block) -this slot’s offset is again dictated by libgcc
. The generatedassembly looks like this on x86-64:
- leaq -8(%rsp), %r10
- cmpq %fs:112, %r10
- jg .LBB0_2
- # More stack space needs to be allocated
- movabsq $8, %r10 # The amount of space needed
- movabsq $0, %r11 # The total size of arguments passed on stack
- callq __morestack
- ret # The reason for this extra return is explained below
- .LBB0_2:
- # Usual prologue continues here
The size of function arguments on the stack needs to be passed to__morestack
(this function is implemented in libgcc
) since that numberof bytes has to be copied from the previous stacklet to the current one. This isso that SP (and FP) relative addressing of function arguments work as expected.
The unusual ret
is needed to have the function which made a call tomorestack
return correctly. morestack
, instead of returning, callsinto .LBB0_2
. This is possible since both, the size of the ret
instruction and the PC of call to morestack
are known. When the functionbody returns, control is transferred back to morestack
. __morestack
then de-allocates the new stacklet, restores the correct SP value, and does asecond return, which returns control to the correct caller.
Variable Sized Allocas
The section on allocating stacklets automatically assumes that every stackframe will be of fixed size. However, LLVM allows the use of the llvm.alloca
intrinsic to allocate dynamically sized blocks of memory on the stack. Whenfaced with such a variable-sized alloca, code is generated to:
- Check if the current stacklet has enough space. If yes, just bump the SP, likein the normal case.
- If not, generate a call to
libgcc
, which allocates the memory from theheap.
The memory allocated from the heap is linked into a list in the currentstacklet, and freed along with the same. This prevents a memory leak.