The IPI stream is structurally identical to the TPI stream, but it
contains different record types. So we just re-use the TPI writing
code.
llvm-svn: 281638
Copying in the full text of the function doesn't help at all when we
already know that it's never executed. Just say that it's unexecuted --
the relevant source text has already been printed.
llvm-svn: 281589
The `CVType` had two redundant fields which were confusing and
error-prone to fill out. By treating member records as a distinct
type from leaf records, we are able to simplify this quite a bit.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24432
llvm-svn: 281556
This completes being able to write all the interesting
values of a PDB TPI stream.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24370
llvm-svn: 281555
If TBAA is on an intrinsic and it gets upgraded, it'll delete the call
instruction that we collected in a vector. Even if we were to use
WeakVH, it'll drop the TBAA and we'll hit the assert on the upgrade
path.
r263673 gave a shot to make sure the TBAA upgrade happens before
intrinsics upgrade, but failed to account for all cases.
Instead of collecting instructions in a vector, this patch makes it
just upgrade the TBAA on the fly, because metadata are always
already loaded at this point.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24533
llvm-svn: 281549
Summary:
It was previously not possible for tools to use solely the stackmap
information emitted to reconstruct the return addresses of callsites in
the map, which is necessary to use the information to walk a stack. This
patch adds per-function callsite counts when emitting the stackmap
section in order to resolve the problem. Note that this slightly alters
the stackmap format, so external tools parsing these maps will need to
be updated.
**Problem Details:**
Records only store their offset from the beginning of the function they
belong to. While these records and the functions are output in program
order, it is not possible to determine where the end of one function's
records are without the callsite count when processing the records to
compute return addresses.
Patch by Kavon Farvardin!
Reviewers: atrick, ributzka, sanjoy
Subscribers: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23487
llvm-svn: 281532
This change ensures all necessary symbols are resolved correctly. Before this
change on some systems, the linker may have eliminated some symbols not directly
used in bugpoint, but used in Polly.
Suggested-by: Michael Kruse <lvm@meinersbur.de>
llvm-svn: 281438
The llvm-cov version information will be useful to the user when comparing the code coverage across different versions of llvm-cov. This patch provides the llvm-cov version information in the generated coverage report.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24457
llvm-svn: 281321
We have various command line options that print the type of a
stream, the size of a stream, etc but nowhere that it can all be
viewed together.
Since a previous patch introduced the ability to dump the bytes
of a stream, this seems like a good place to present a full view
of the stream's properties including its size, what kind of data
it represents, and the blocks it occupies. So I added the
ability to print that information to the -stream-data command
line option.
llvm-svn: 281077
These asserts are making tests fragile. The renderer does not enter an
invalid state when they fail, however, it may spit out a garbled
coverage report because the source text no longer matches the provided
coverage mapping.
Another follow-up to r281072.
llvm-svn: 281076
I ran into a situation where I wanted to print out the contents of
page 6 of a PDB as a binary blob, and there was no straightforward
way to do that.
In addition to adding that, this patch also adds the ability to dump
a stream by index as a binary blob, and it will stitch together all
the blocks and dump the whole thing as one seemingly contiguous
sequence of bytes.
llvm-svn: 281070
This simplifies a lot of code, and will actually be necessary for
an upcoming patch to serialize TPI record hash values.
The idea before was that visitors should be examining records, not
modifying them. But this is no longer true with a visitor that
constructs a CVRecord from Yaml. To handle this until now, we
were doing some fixups on CVRecord objects at a higher level, but
the code is really awkward, and it makes sense to just have the
visitor write the bytes into the CVRecord. In doing so I uncovered
a few bugs related to `Data` and `RawData` and fixed those.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24362
llvm-svn: 281067
This writes the full sequence of type records described in
Yaml to the TPI stream of the PDB file.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24316
llvm-svn: 281063
Treat filenames the same way in the text index as we do in the html
index. This is a follow-up to r281008 (an attempt to unbreak the
native_separators.c test on Windows).
Patch by Maggie Yi!
llvm-svn: 281062
llvm-cov writes out an index file in '-output-dir' mode, albeit not a
very informative one. Try to fix that by using the CoverageReport API to
include some basic summary information in the index file.
llvm-svn: 281011
It would be nice to prepare file reports (using the CoverageReport API)
without actually rendering them to the console. I plan on using this to
flesh out the 'index' files in the coverage views.
llvm-svn: 281009
The text and html coverage views take different approaches to emitting
highlighted regions. That's because this problem is easier in the text
view: there's no need to worry about escaping text or adding tooltip
content to a highlighted snippet.
Unfortunately, the html view didn't get region highlighting quite right.
This patch fixes the situation, bringing parity between the two views.
llvm-svn: 280981
Previously we were making new instances of YamlTypeDumperCallbacks
in order to recurse down and serialize / deserialize nested
records such as field lists. This meant you could not pass
context from a higher operation to a lower operation because
it would be using a new instance of the visitor callback
delegate.
YAMLIO library was updated to support context-sensitive mappings,
so now we can reuse the same instance of the visitor callback
delegate even for nested operations.
llvm-svn: 280978
In r279628, we made SourceCoverageView list the binary associated with a
view and started adding labels (e.g "Source: foo" or "Function: bar") to
everything. Condense this information a bit to unclutter reports.
llvm-svn: 280896
This was originally submitted in r280549, and reverted in r280577
due to breaking one MSVC buildbot. The issue is that MSVC 2013
doesn't synthesize move constructors. So even though i was
writing std::move(A) it was copying it, leading to a bogus ArrayRef.
The solution here is to simply remove the std::vector<> from the
type, since it is unused and unnecessary. This way the ArrayRef
continues to point into the original memory backing the CVType.
llvm-svn: 280769
Use the same color for counts and percentages. There doesn't seem to be
a reason for them to be different, and the summary looks more consistent
this way.
llvm-svn: 280765
This patch provides easy navigation to find the zero count lines, especially useful when the source file is very large.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23277
llvm-svn: 280739
This adds a copy of the demangler in libcxxabi.
The code also has no dependencies on anything else in LLVM. To enforce
that I added it as another library. That way a BUILD_SHARED_LIBS will
fail if anyone adds an use of StringRef for example.
The no llvm dependency combined with the fact that this has to build
on linux, OS X and Windows required a few changes to the code. In
particular:
No constexpr.
No alignas
On OS X at least this library has only one global symbol:
__ZN4llvm16itanium_demangleEPKcPcPmPi
My current plan is:
Commit something like this
Change lld to use it
Change lldb to use it as the fallback
Add a few #ifdefs so that exactly the same file can be used in
libcxxabi to export abi::__cxa_demangle.
Once the fast demangler in lldb can handle any names this
implementation can be replaced with it and we will have the one true
demangler.
llvm-svn: 280732
This replaces the threading of `std::string &Error` through all of
these APIs with checked Error returns instead. There are very few
places here that actually emit any errors right now, but threading the
APIs through will allow us to replace a bunch of exit(1)'s that are
scattered through this code with proper error handling.
This is more or less NFC, but does move around where a couple of error
messages are printed out.
llvm-svn: 280720
This isn't the right thing to do - it turns out a number of the APIs
that "never fail" just exit(1) if something bad happens. We can and
should thread Error through this instead.
That diff will make more sense with this reverted. Sorry for the
noise.
This reverts r280690
llvm-svn: 280691
This simplifies ListReducer and most of its subclasses by removing the
std::string &Error that was threaded through all of them but almost
never used. If we end up needing error handling in more places here we
can reinstate it using llvm::Error instead of these unwieldy strings.
The 2 cases (out of 12) that actually can hit the error cases are a
little bit awkward now, but those will clean up as I refactor this API
further.
llvm-svn: 280690
Before we were kind of imitating the behavior of a Yaml sequence
by outputting each record one after the other. This makes it a
little cumbersome when we want to go the other direction -- from
Yaml to Pdb. So this treats FieldList records as no different than
any other list of records, by printing them as a Yaml sequence with
the exact same format.
llvm-svn: 280549