=============================== ORC Design and Implementation =============================== Introduction ============ This document aims to provide a high-level overview of the design and implementation of the ORC JIT APIs. Except where otherwise stated, all discussion applies to the design of the APIs as of LLVM verison 9 (ORCv2). .. contents:: :local: Use-cases ========= ORC provides a modular API for building JIT compilers. There are a range of use cases for such an API: 1. The LLVM tutorials use a simple ORC-based JIT class to execute expressions compiled from a toy languge: Kaleidoscope. 2. The LLVM debugger, LLDB, uses a cross-compiling JIT for expression evaluation. In this use case, cross compilation allows expressions compiled in the debugger process to be executed on the debug target process, which may be on a different device/architecture. 3. In high-performance JITs (e.g. JVMs, Julia) that want to make use of LLVM's optimizations within an existing JIT infrastructure. 4. In interpreters and REPLs, e.g. Cling (C++) and the Swift interpreter. By adoping a modular, library-based design we aim to make ORC useful in as many of these contexts as possible. Features ======== ORC provides the following features: - *JIT-linking* links relocatable object files (COFF, ELF, MachO) [1]_ into a target process an runtime. The target process may be the same process that contains the JIT session object and jit-linker, or may be another process (even one running on a different machine or architecture) that communicates with the JIT via RPC. - *LLVM IR compilation*, which is provided by off the shelf components (IRCompileLayer, SimpleCompiler, ConcurrentIRCompiler) that make it easy to add LLVM IR to a JIT'd process. - *Eager and lazy compilation*. By default, ORC will compile symbols as soon as they are looked up in the JIT session object (``ExecutionSession``). Compiling eagerly by default makes it easy to use ORC as a simple in-memory compiler for an existing JIT. ORC also provides a simple mechanism, lazy-reexports, for deferring compilation until first call. - *Support for custom compilers and program representations*. Clients can supply custom compilers for each symbol that they define in their JIT session. ORC will run the user-supplied compiler when the a definition of a symbol is needed. ORC is actually fully language agnostic: LLVM IR is not treated specially, and is supported via the same wrapper mechanism (the ``MaterializationUnit`` class) that is used for custom compilers. - *Concurrent JIT'd code* and *concurrent compilation*. JIT'd code may spawn multiple threads, and may re-enter the JIT (e.g. for lazy compilation) concurrently from multiple threads. The ORC APIs also support running multiple compilers concurrently, and provides off-the-shelf infrastructure to track dependencies on running compiles (e.g. to ensure that we never call into code until it is safe to do so, even if that involves waiting on multiple compiles). - *Orthogonality* and *composability*: Each of the features above can be used (or not) independently. It is possible to put ORC components together to make a non-lazy, in-process, single threaded JIT or a lazy, out-of-process, concurrent JIT, or anything in between. LLJIT and LLLazyJIT =================== ORC provides two basic JIT classes off-the-shelf. These are useful both as examples of how to assemble ORC components to make a JIT, and as replacements for earlier LLVM JIT APIs (e.g. MCJIT). The LLJIT class uses an IRCompileLayer and RTDyldObjectLinkingLayer to support compilation of LLVM IR and linking of relocatable object files. All operations are performed eagerly on symbol lookup (i.e. a symbol's definition is compiled as soon as you attempt to look up its address). LLJIT is a suitable replacement for MCJIT in most cases (note: some more advanced features, e.g. JITEventListeners are not supported yet). The LLLazyJIT extends LLJIT and adds a CompileOnDemandLayer to enable lazy compilation of LLVM IR. When an LLVM IR module is added via the addLazyIRModule method, function bodies in that module will not be compiled until they are first called. LLLazyJIT aims to provide a replacement of LLVM's original (pre-MCJIT) JIT API. LLJIT and LLLazyJIT instances can be created using their respective builder classes: LLJITBuilder and LLazyJITBuilder. For example, assuming you have a module ``M`` loaded on an ThreadSafeContext ``Ctx``: .. code-block:: c++ // Try to detect the host arch and construct an LLJIT instance. auto JIT = LLJITBuilder().create(); // If we could not construct an instance, return an error. if (!JIT) return JIT.takeError(); // Add the module. if (auto Err = JIT->addIRModule(TheadSafeModule(std::move(M), Ctx))) return Err; // Look up the JIT'd code entry point. auto EntrySym = JIT->lookup("entry"); if (!EntrySym) return EntrySym.takeError(); auto *Entry = (void(*)())EntrySym.getAddress(); Entry(); The builder clasess provide a number of configuration options that can be specified before the JIT instance is constructed. For example: .. code-block:: c++ // Build an LLLazyJIT instance that uses four worker threads for compilation, // and jumps to a specific error handler (rather than null) on lazy compile // failures. void handleLazyCompileFailure() { // JIT'd code will jump here if lazy compilation fails, giving us an // opportunity to exit or throw an exception into JIT'd code. throw JITFailed(); } auto JIT = LLLazyJITBuilder() .setNumCompileThreads(4) .setLazyCompileFailureAddr( toJITTargetAddress(&handleLazyCompileFailure)) .create(); // ... For users wanting to get started with LLJIT a minimal example program can be found at ``llvm/examples/HowToUseLLJIT``. Design Overview =============== ORC's JIT'd program model aims to emulate the linking and symbol resolution rules used by the static and dynamic linkers. This allows ORC to JIT arbitrary LLVM IR, including IR produced by an ordinary static compiler (e.g. clang) that uses constructs like symbol linkage and visibility, and weak and common symbol definitions. To see how this works, imagine a program ``foo`` which links against a pair of dynamic libraries: ``libA`` and ``libB``. On the command line, building this system might look like: .. code-block:: bash $ clang++ -shared -o libA.dylib a1.cpp a2.cpp $ clang++ -shared -o libB.dylib b1.cpp b2.cpp $ clang++ -o myapp myapp.cpp -L. -lA -lB $ ./myapp In ORC, this would translate into API calls on a "CXXCompilingLayer" (with error checking omitted for brevity) as: .. code-block:: c++ ExecutionSession ES; RTDyldObjectLinkingLayer ObjLinkingLayer( ES, []() { return llvm::make_unique(); }); CXXCompileLayer CXXLayer(ES, ObjLinkingLayer); // Create JITDylib "A" and add code to it using the CXX layer. auto &LibA = ES.createJITDylib("A"); CXXLayer.add(LibA, MemoryBuffer::getFile("a1.cpp")); CXXLayer.add(LibA, MemoryBuffer::getFile("a2.cpp")); // Create JITDylib "B" and add code to it using the CXX layer. auto &LibB = ES.createJITDylib("B"); CXXLayer.add(LibB, MemoryBuffer::getFile("b1.cpp")); CXXLayer.add(LibB, MemoryBuffer::getFile("b2.cpp")); // Specify the search order for the main JITDylib. This is equivalent to a // "links against" relationship in a command-line link. ES.getMainJITDylib().setSearchOrder({{&LibA, false}, {&LibB, false}}); CXXLayer.add(ES.getMainJITDylib(), MemoryBuffer::getFile("main.cpp")); // Look up the JIT'd main, cast it to a function pointer, then call it. auto MainSym = ExitOnErr(ES.lookup({&ES.getMainJITDylib()}, "main")); auto *Main = (int(*)(int, char*[]))MainSym.getAddress(); int Result = Main(...); This example tells us nothing about *how* or *when* compilation will happen. That will depend on the implementation of the hypothetical CXXCompilingLayer, but the linking rules will be the same regardless. For example, if a1.cpp and a2.cpp both define a function "foo" the API should generate a duplicate definition error. On the other hand, if a1.cpp and b1.cpp both define "foo" there is no error (different dynamic libraries may define the same symbol). If main.cpp refers to "foo", it should bind to the definition in LibA rather than the one in LibB, since main.cpp is part of the "main" dylib, and the main dylib links against LibA before LibB. Many JIT clients will have no need for this strict adherence to the usual ahead-of-time linking rules and should be able to get by just fine by putting all of their code in a single JITDylib. However, clients who want to JIT code for languages/projects that traditionally rely on ahead-of-time linking (e.g. C++) will find that this feature makes life much easier. Symbol lookup in ORC serves two other important functions, beyond basic lookup: (1) It triggers compilation of the symbol(s) searched for, and (2) it provides the synchronization mechanism for concurrent compilation. The pseudo-code for the lookup process is: .. code-block:: none construct a query object from a query set and query handler lock the session lodge query against requested symbols, collect required materializers (if any) unlock the session dispatch materializers (if any) In this context a materializer is something that provides a working definition of a symbol upon request. Generally materializers wrap compilers, but they may also wrap a linker directly (if the program representation backing the definitions is an object file), or even just a class that writes bits directly into memory (if the definitions are stubs). Materialization is the blanket term for any actions (compiling, linking, splatting bits, registering with runtimes, etc.) that is requried to generate a symbol definition that is safe to call or access. As each materializer completes its work it notifies the JITDylib, which in turn notifies any query objects that are waiting on the newly materialized definitions. Each query object maintains a count of the number of symbols that it is still waiting on, and once this count reaches zero the query object calls the query handler with a *SymbolMap* (a map of symbol names to addresses) describing the result. If any symbol fails to materialize the query immediately calls the query handler with an error. The collected materialization units are sent to the ExecutionSession to be dispatched, and the dispatch behavior can be set by the client. By default each materializer is run on the calling thread. Clients are free to create new threads to run materializers, or to send the work to a work queue for a thread pool (this is what LLJIT/LLLazyJIT do). Top Level APIs ============== Many of ORC's top-level APIs are visible in the example above: - *ExecutionSession* represents the JIT'd program and provides context for the JIT: It contains the JITDylibs, error reporting mechanisms, and dispatches the materializers. - *JITDylibs* provide the symbol tables. - *Layers* (ObjLinkingLayer and CXXLayer) are wrappers around compilers and allow clients to add uncompiled program representations supported by those compilers to JITDylibs. Several other important APIs are used explicitly. JIT clients need not be aware of them, but Layer authors will use them: - *MaterializationUnit* - When XXXLayer::add is invoked it wraps the given program representation (in this example, C++ source) in a MaterializationUnit, which is then stored in the JITDylib. MaterializationUnits are responsible for describing the definitions they provide, and for unwrapping the program representation and passing it back to the layer when compilation is required (this ownership shuffle makes writing thread-safe layers easier, since the ownership of the program representation will be passed back on the stack, rather than having to be fished out of a Layer member, which would require synchronization). - *MaterializationResponsibility* - When a MaterializationUnit hands a program representation back to the layer it comes with an associated MaterializationResponsibility object. This object tracks the definitions that must be materialized and provides a way to notify the JITDylib once they are either successfully materialized or a failure occurs. Handy utilities =============== TBD: absolute symbols, aliases, off-the-shelf layers. Laziness ======== Laziness in ORC is provided by a utility called "lazy-reexports". The aim of this utility is to re-use the synchronization provided by the symbol lookup mechanism to make it safe to lazily compile functions, even if calls to the stub occur simultaneously on multiple threads of JIT'd code. It does this by reducing lazy compilation to symbol lookup: The lazy stub performs a lookup of its underlying definition on first call, updating the function body pointer once the definition is available. If additional calls arrive on other threads while compilation is ongoing they will be safely blocked by the normal lookup synchronization guarantee (no result until the result is safe) and can also proceed as soon as compilation completes. TBD: Usage example. Supporting Custom Compilers =========================== TBD. Low Level (MCJIT style) Use =========================== TBD. Future Features =============== TBD: Speculative compilation. Object Caches. .. [1] Formats/architectures vary in terms of supported features. MachO and ELF tend to have better support than COFF. Patches very welcome!