This fixes the highlighting for lines without any coverage segments. I
don't have a neat way of testing this yet, but am working on it.
llvm-svn: 276906
Summary:
Add a pass to bugpoint to make it transform conditional jumps into unconditional jumps.
Often, bugpoint generates output that has large numbers of br undef jumps, where
one side is dead.
What is happening is two fold:
1. It never tries to just pick a direction for the jump, and just see what happens
<<<< this patch
2. SimplifyCFG no longer is a good match for bugpoint's usecase. It
does too much.
Even things in SimplifyCFG, like removeUnreachableBlocks, go to great
lengths to transform undefined behavior into blocks and kill large
parts of the CFG. This is great for regular code, not so much for
bugpoint, which often generates UB on purpose (store undef is a great
example).
<<<< a followup patch that is coming, to move simplifycfg into a
separate reduction pass, and move the existing reduceCrashingBlocks
pass to use simpleSimplifyCFG.
Both of these patches significantly reduce the size and complexity of bugpoint
generated testcases.
Reviewers: chandlerc, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22841
llvm-svn: 276884
Summary:
To build llgo, you must currently ensure that llgo
is in the tools/llgo directory, due to a hard-coded
path in llvm-go.
To support the use of LLVM_EXTERNAL_LLGO_SOURCE_DIR,
we introduce a flag to llvm-go that enables the
caller to specify the paths to symlink in the
temporary $GOPATH.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21634
llvm-svn: 276829
This enables users to export coverage information as portable JSON for use by
analysis tools and storage in document based databases.
The export sub-command is invoked just like the others:
llvm-cov export -instr-profile path/to/foo.profdata path/to/foo.binary
The resulting JSON contains a list of files and functions. Every file object
contains a list of segments, expansions, and a summary of the file's region,
function, and line coverage. Every function object contains the function's name
and regions. There is also a total summary for the entire object file.
Changes since the initial commit (r276813):
- Fixed the regexes in the tests to handle Windows filepaths.
Patch by Eddie Hurtig!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22651
llvm-svn: 276818
This enables users to export coverage information as portable JSON for use by
analysis tools and storage in document based databases.
The export sub-command is invoked just like the others:
llvm-cov export -instr-profile path/to/foo.profdata path/to/foo.binary
The resulting JSON contains a list of files and functions. Every file object
contains a list of segments, expansions, and a summary of the file's region,
function, and line coverage. Every function object contains the function's name
and regions. There is also a total summary for the entire object file.
Patch by Eddie Hurtig!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22651
llvm-svn: 276813
Recent changes to Xcode have changed the structure of Xcode toolchains. This patch makes the xcode-toolchain goop construct a new-format Xcode toolchain that is compatible with Xcode 7.
The new format has a compatibility version key, so when a new format comes out we can support multiple formats in parallel.
llvm-svn: 276718
Some targets, notably AArch64 for ILP32, have different relocation encodings
based upon the ABI. This is an enabling change, so a future patch can use the
ABIName from MCTargetOptions to chose which relocations to use. Tested using
check-llvm.
The corresponding change to clang is in: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16538
Patch by: Joel Jones
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D16213
llvm-svn: 276654
This makes it easier to have the writable and readable PDB
interfaces share code since the read/write and write-only
interfaces now share a single allocator, you don't have to worry
about a builder building a read only interface and then having
the read-only interface's data become corrupt when the builder
goes out of scope. Now the allocator is specified explicitly
to all constructors, so all interfaces can share a single allocator
that is scoped appropriately.
llvm-svn: 276459
This provides a better layering of responsibilities among different
aspects of PDB writing code. Some of the MSF related code was
contained in CodeView, and some was in PDB prior to this. Further,
we were often saying PDB when we meant MSF, and the two are
actually independent of each other since in theory you can have
other types of data besides PDB data in an MSF. So, this patch
separates the MSF specific code into its own library, with no
dependencies on anything else, and DebugInfoCodeView and
DebugInfoPDB take dependencies on DebugInfoMsf.
llvm-svn: 276458
Summary:
In the distributed backend case, the ThinLink step and the final native
object link are separate processes. This can be problematic when archive
libraries are involved in the link (e.g. via --start-lib/--end-lib
pairs). The linker only includes objects from libraries when
there is a strong reference to them, and depending on the intervening
ThinLTO backend processes' importing/inlining, the strong references
may appear different in the two link steps. See D22356 and D22467
for two scenarios where this causes issues.
To ensure that the final link includes the same objects, this patch
adds support for an "=filename" form of the thinlto-index-only plugin
option, in which case objects gold included in the link are emitted to
the given filename. This should be used as input to the final link (e.g.
via the @filename option to gold), instead of listing all the objects
within --start-lib/--end-lib pairs again.
Note that the support for the gold callback that identifies included
objects was added in gold version 1.12.
Reviewers: davidxl, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22677
llvm-svn: 276450
This implements support for writing compiland and compiland source
file info to a binary PDB. This is tested by adding support for
dumping these fields from an existing PDB to yaml, reading them
back in, and dumping them again and verifying the values are as
expected.
llvm-svn: 276426
The llvm-cov ‘report' command displays a summary of the coverage of a binary file.
The summary report currently only includes covered regions and covered functions.
This patch adds the coverage of lines in the summary report.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22569
llvm-svn: 276409
This change adds a hasFileAtIndex method. getChildDeclContext can first call this method, and if it returns true it knows it can then lookup the resolved path cache for the given file index. If we hit that cache then we don't even have to call getFileNameByIndex.
Running dsymutil against the swift executable built from github gives a 20% performance improvement without any change in the binary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22655
Reviewed by friss.
llvm-svn: 276380
This makes it easy to swap out the default stylesheet for a custom one.
It also shaves ~6.62 MB out of the report directory for a full coverage
build of llvm+clang.
While we're at it, prune the CSS and add tests for it.
llvm-svn: 276359
Previously LLVM_HAS_GLOBAL_ISEL would directly get the value of
LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL. This could be any integer value and not just ON
and OFF. The problem is that lit.cfg was checking for ON to define that
global-isel was supported, thus if we were setting
LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL with an integer value, say 1, this test would
fail whereas we do build global-isel and want to test it.
llvm-svn: 276307
This step builds on Lang Hames work to change Archive::child_iterator
for better interoperation with Error/Expected. Building on that it is now
possible to return an error message when the size field of an archive
contains non-decimal characters.
llvm-svn: 276025
Add a "-j" option to llvm-profdata to control the number of threads used.
Auto-detect NumThreads when it isn't specified, and avoid spawning threads when
they wouldn't be beneficial.
I tested this patch using a raw profile produced by clang (147MB). Here is the
time taken to merge 4 copies together on my laptop:
No thread pool: 112.87s user 5.92s system 97% cpu 2:01.08 total
With 2 threads: 134.99s user 26.54s system 164% cpu 1:33.31 total
Changes since the initial commit:
- When handling odd-length inputs, call ThreadPool::wait() before merging the
last profile. Should fix a race/off-by-one (see r275937).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22438
llvm-svn: 275938
Add a "-j" option to llvm-profdata to control the number of threads
used. Auto-detect NumThreads when it isn't specified, and avoid spawning
threads when they wouldn't be beneficial.
I tested this patch using a raw profile produced by clang (147MB). Here is the
time taken to merge 4 copies together on my laptop:
No thread pool: 112.87s user 5.92s system 97% cpu 2:01.08 total
With 2 threads: 134.99s user 26.54s system 164% cpu 1:33.31 total
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22438
llvm-svn: 275921
This does not schedule any passes besides the ones necessary to
construct and print the machine function. This is useful to test .mir
file reading and printing.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22432
llvm-svn: 275664
The default behavior of bugpoint is to print "<crash>" when it finds a reduced
test that crashes compilation. With this flag we now can see the output of the
crashing program. This is useful to make sure it is the same error being
tracked down and not a different error that happens to crash the compiler as
well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22411
llvm-svn: 275646
Add an option to specify a symbol demangler (as well as options to the
demangler). This can be used to make reports more human-readable.
This option is especially useful in -output-dir mode, since it isn't as
easy to manually pipe reports into a demangler in this mode.
llvm-svn: 275640
The same value for EM_BPF is being propagated to glibc,
elfutils, and binutils.
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <rth@twiddle.net>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 275633
Block 1 and 2 of an MSF file are bit vectors that represent the
list of blocks allocated and free in the file. We had been using
these blocks to write stream data and other data, so we mark them
as the free page map now. We don't yet serialize these pages to
the disk, but at least we make a note of what it is, and avoid
writing random data to them.
Doing this also necessitated cleaning up some of the tests to be
more general and hardcode fewer values, which is nice.
llvm-svn: 275629
Previously we would read a PDB, then write some of it back out,
but write the directory, super block, and other pertinent metadata
back out unchanged. This generates incorrect PDBs since the amount
of data written was not always the same as the amount of data read.
This patch changes things to use the newly introduced `MsfBuilder`
class to write out a correct and accurate set of Msf metadata for
the data *actually* written, which opens up the door for adding and
removing type records, symbol records, and other types of data to
an existing PDB.
llvm-svn: 275627
Summary:
This is the first set of changes implementing the RFC from
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/98334
This is a cross-sectional patch; rather than implementing the hotness
attribute for all optimization remarks and all passes in a patch set, it
implements it for the 'missed-optimization' remark for Loop
Distribution. My goal is to shake out the design issues before scaling
it up to other types and passes.
Hotness is computed as an integer as the multiplication of the block
frequency with the function entry count. It's only printed in opt
currently since clang prints the diagnostic fields directly. E.g.:
remark: /tmp/t.c:3:3: loop not distributed: use -Rpass-analysis=loop-distribute for more info (hotness: 300)
A new API added is similar to emitOptimizationRemarkMissed. The
difference is that it additionally takes a code region that the
diagnostic corresponds to. From this, hotness is computed using BFI.
The new API is exposed via an analysis pass so that it can be made
dependent on LazyBFI. (Thanks to Hal for the analysis pass idea.)
This feature can all be enabled by setDiagnosticHotnessRequested in the
LLVM context. If this is off, LazyBFI is not calculated (D22141) so
there should be no overhead.
A new command-line option is added to turn this on in opt.
My plan is to switch all user of emitOptimizationRemark* to use this
module instead.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: rcox2, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21771
llvm-svn: 275583
Taking a lock before appending to a vector does no good unless threads
reading from the vector also take the lock, because the vector could be
re-sized.
I don't have a good isolated test for this. I found the issue with ASan
while testing a large project. I'm working on a bot that does this.
llvm-svn: 275516
Writing `for (StringRef &SourceFile : ...)` is strange to begin with.
Subsequently capturing "SourceFile" by reference is even stranger. Just
copy the StringRef, since that's cheap to do.
llvm-svn: 275515
We don't need to print any of the special __mh_*_header symbols when
disassembling. Since they point at the beginning of the segment (not where the
actual code is) they're pretty misleading.
Should also fix lld bots.
llvm-svn: 275498
We were quite happy to read past the end of the valid section data when
disassembling. Instead we entirely skip stub dylibs, and tell the user what's
happened if their section only has partial data.
llvm-svn: 275487
Summary:
Invoke the weak/linkonce symbol resolution support (already used by
libLTO) that operates via the summary index.
This ensures prevailing linkonce are kept, by making them weak, and
marks preempted copies as available_externally when possible.
With this change, the older support for keeping the prevailing linkonce
(by changing their symbol resolution) is removed.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22302
llvm-svn: 275474
It's safe to print out source coverage views using multiple threads when
using the -output-dir mode of the `llvm-cov show` sub-command.
While testing this on my development machine, I observed that the speed
up is roughly linear with the number of available cores. Avg. time for
`llvm-cov show ./llvm-as -show-line-counts-or-regions`:
1 thread: 7.79s user 0.33s system 98% cpu 8.228 total
4 threads: 7.82s user 0.34s system 283% cpu 2.880 total
llvm-svn: 275321
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D22079
Changes the Archive::child_begin and Archive::children to require a reference
to an Error. If iterator increment fails (because the archive header is
damaged) the iterator will be set to 'end()', and the error stored in the
given Error&. The Error value should be checked by the user immediately after
the loop. E.g.:
Error Err;
for (auto &C : A->children(Err)) {
// Do something with archive child C.
}
// Check the error immediately after the loop.
if (Err)
return Err;
Failure to check the Error will result in an abort() when the Error goes out of
scope (as guaranteed by the Error class).
llvm-svn: 275316
Currently the MIR framework prints all its outputs (errors and actual
representation) on stderr.
This patch fixes that by printing the regular output in the output
specified with -o.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22251
llvm-svn: 275314
While testing a follow-on change to enable index-based symbol resolution
and internalization in the distributed backends, I realized that a test
case change I made in r275247 was only required because we were not
analyzing symbols in the claimed files in thinlto-index-only mode.
In the fixed test case there should be no internalization because we are
linking in -shared mode, so f() is in fact exported, which is detected
properly when we analyze symbols in thinlto-index-only mode. Note that
this is not (yet) a correctness issue (because we are not yet performing
the index-based linkage optimizations in the distributed backends -
that's coming in a follow-on patch).
llvm-svn: 275277
Internalization was missing cases where we originally had a local symbol
that was promoted eagerly but not actually exported. This is because we
were only internalizing the set of global (non-local) symbols that were
PREVAILAING_DEF_IRONLY. Instead, collect the set of global symbols that
are referenced outside of a single IR file, and skip internalization for
those.
llvm-svn: 275247
The linker supports a feature to force load an object from a static
archive if it defines an Objective-C category.
This API supports this feature by looking at every section in the
module to find if a category is defined in the module.
llvm-svn: 275125
This will be useful once we start adding the ability to dump type
records and symbol records, since it will allow us to generate
mergeable information instead of information that specifies an
entire file.
llvm-svn: 275109
Preserve assembly comments from input in output assembly and flags to
toggle property. This is on by default for inline assembly and off in
llvm-mc.
Parsed comments are emitted immediately before an EOL which generally
places them on the expected line.
Reviewers: rtrieu, dwmw2, rnk, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20020
llvm-svn: 275058
There is no polymorphism here, and StreamRef already contains a
StreamInterface pointer. Dropping the base class makes StreamRef more
transparent to the compiler, for example it can find unused variables.
llvm-svn: 275013
We are currently using add_llvm_utility for executable targets that:
1. Are built by default.
2. Used for testing.
3. Are not installed by default.
Originally, lli-child-target used add_llvm_tool instead of add_llvm_executable
directly. This was changed so that lli-child-target would not be installed. This
was good since this is only used for testing and should never be installed for
users. This also had the unfortunate side effect that one can never turn off the
building of lli-child-target by default, a regression for projects that by
default do not want to compile any LLVM tools beyond tablegen/llvm-config.
This patch changes lli-child-target to use add_llvm_utility. This makes sense
since:
1. lli-child-target matches the semantics of executables created with
add_llvm_utility.
2. We fix the regression since now one can use the flag LLVM_BUILD_UTILS to
eliminate default compilation.
llvm-svn: 275008
Somehow all the functionality to write PDB files got removed,
probably accidentally when uploading the patch perhaps the wrong
one got uploaded. This re-adds all the code, as well as the
corresponding test.
llvm-svn: 274248
The NewArchiveIterator class has a problem: it requires too much context. Any
memory buffers added to the archive must be stored within an Archive::Member,
which must have an associated Archive. This makes it harder than necessary
to create new archive members (or new archives entirely) from scratch using
memory buffers.
This patch replaces NewArchiveIterator with a NewArchiveMember class that
stores just the memory buffer and the information that goes into the archive
member header.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21721
llvm-svn: 274183
This fixes pr28072.
The point, as Duncan pointed out, is that the file is already
partially linked by just reading it.
Long term I think the solution is to make metadata owned by the module
and then the linker will lazily read it and be in charge of all the
linking. Running a verifier in each input will defeat the lazy
loading, but will be legal.
Right now we are at the unfortunate position that to support odr
merging we cannot verify the inputs, which mildly annoying (see test
update).
llvm-svn: 274148
In -output-dir mode, file reports are placed into a "coverage"
directory. If filenames in the coverage mapping contain "..", they might
escape out of this directory.
Fix the problem by removing ".." from source filenames (expand the path
component).
llvm-svn: 274135
- Add renderView{Header,Footer}, renderLineSuffix, and hasSubViews to
support creating tables with nested views.
- Move the 'Format' cl::opt to make it easier to extend.
- Just create one function view file, instead of overwriting the same
file for every new function. Add a regression test for this.
llvm-svn: 274086
and its clients to use the new llvm::Error model for error handling.
Changed getAsArchive() from ErrorOr<...> to Expected<...> so now all
interfaces there use the new llvm::Error model for return values.
In the two places it had if (!Parent) this is actually a program error so changed
from returning errorCodeToError(object_error::parse_failed) to calling
report_fatal_error() with a message.
In getObjectForArch() added error messages to its two llvm::Error return values
instead of returning errorCodeToError(object_error::arch_not_found) with no
error message.
For the llvm-obdump, llvm-nm and llvm-size clients since the only binary files in
Mach-O Universal Binaries that are supported are Mach-O files or archives with
Mach-O objects, updated their logic to generate an error when a slice contains
something like an ELF binary instead of ignoring it. And added a test case for
that.
The last error stuff to be cleaned up for libObject’s MachOUniversalBinary is
the use of errorOrToExpected(Archive::create(ObjBuffer)) which needs
Archive::create() to be changed from ErrorOr<...> to Expected<...> first,
which I’ll work on next.
llvm-svn: 274079
This index lists the reports available in the 'coverage' sub-directory.
This will help navigate coverage output from large projects.
This commit factors the file creation code out of SourceCoverageView and
into CoveragePrinter.
llvm-svn: 274029
Passing -output-dir path/to/dir to llvm-cov show creates path/to/dir if
it doesn't already exist, and prints reports into that directory.
In function view mode, all views are written into
path/to/dir/functions.$EXTENSION. In file view mode, all views are
written into path/to/dir/coverage/$PATH.$EXTENSION.
Changes since the initial commit:
- Avoid accidentally closing stdout twice.
llvm-svn: 273985
This reverts commit r273971. test/profile/instrprof-visibility.cpp is
failing because of an uncaught error in SafelyCloseFileDescriptor.
llvm-svn: 273978
Passing -output-dir path/to/dir to llvm-cov show creates path/to/dir if
it doesn't already exist, and prints reports into that directory.
In function view mode, all views are written into
path/to/dir/functions.$EXTENSION. In file view mode, all views are
written into path/to/dir/coverage/$PATH.$EXTENSION.
llvm-svn: 273971
allow a good error message to be produced.
I added the one test case that the object file tools could produce an error
message. The other two errors can’t be triggered if the input file is passed
through sys::fs::identify_magic(). But the malformedError("bad magic number")
does get triggered by the logic in llvm-dsymutil when dealing with a normal
Mach-O file. The other "File too small ..." error would take a logic error
currently to produce and is not tested for.
llvm-svn: 273946
binutils ar uses -plugin to specify the LTO plugin, but LLVM doesn't
need this as it doesn't use a plugin for LTO. Accepting (and ignoring)
the option allows interoperability with existing build systems and
make downstream consumers life much easier.
No objections from Rafael on this change.
llvm-svn: 273938
Summary:
Our YAML library's handling of tags isn't perfect, but it is good enough to get rid of the need for the --format argument to yaml2obj. This patch does exactly that.
Instead of requiring --format, it infers the format based on the tags found in the object file. The supported tags are:
!ELF
!COFF
!mach-o
!fat-mach-o
I have a corresponding patch that is quite large that fixes up all the in-tree test cases.
Reviewers: rafael, Bigcheese, compnerd, silvas
Subscribers: compnerd, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21711
llvm-svn: 273915
The last import is the penultimate entry, the last entry is nulled out.
Data beyond the null entry should not be considered to hold import
entries.
This fixes PR28302.
N.B. I am working on a reduced testcase, the one in PR28302 is too
large.
llvm-svn: 273790
If a sub-view has already been rendered, it's helpful to re-render the
expansion site before rendering the next expansion view. Make this fact
explicit in the rendering interface, instead of hiding it behind an
awkward Optional<LineRef> parameter.
llvm-svn: 273789
This makes it easier to add renderers for new kinds of output formats.
- Define and document a pure-virtual coverage rendering interface.
- Move the text-based rendering logic into its a new file.
- Re-work the API to better reflect the presentation/formatting split.
llvm-svn: 273767
This patch adds round-trip support for MachO Universal binaries to obj2yaml and yaml2obj. Universal binaries have a header and list of architecture structures, followed by a the individual object files at specified offsets.
llvm-svn: 273719
a good error message to be produced.
This is nearly the last libObject interface that used ErrorOr and the last one
that appears in llvm/include/llvm/Object/MachO.h . For Mach-O objects this is
just a clean up because it’s version of getSymbolAddress() can’t return an
error.
I will leave it to the experts on COFF and ELF to actually add meaning full
error messages in their tests if they wish. And also leave it to these experts
to change the last two ErrorOr interfaces in llvm/include/llvm/Object/ObjectFile.h
for createCOFFObjectFile() and createELFObjectFile() if they wish.
Since there are no test cases for COFF and ELF error cases with respect to
getSymbolAddress() in the test suite this is no functional change (NFC).
llvm-svn: 273701
A SourceName can be a file or a function. It makes sense to attach this
information to a SourceCoverageView, seeing as views (1) already point
to the text corresponding to the relevant source code and (2) are
already used to render that text along with the SourceNames.
This is a nice cleanup which is independent of the upcoming html patch.
While we're at it, document the fields in SourceCoverageView.
llvm-svn: 273634
Pull LineCoverageInfo out of SourceCoverageView and rename it so that it
doesn't conflict with another class of the same name in
CoverageSummaryInfo.h.
This cuts down on the amount of code we have to move into a `protected`
section of SourceCoverageView for the upcoming html patch. It also makes
the code a bit clearer: having two LineCoverageInfo's is strange.
llvm-svn: 273633
32-bit Mach headers don't have reserved fields. When generating the
mapping for 32-bit headers leaving off the reserved field will result in
parse errors if the field is present in the yaml.
Added a CHECK-NOT line to ensure that mach_header.yaml isn't adding a
reserved field, and a test to ensure that the parser error gets hit with
32-bit headers.
llvm-svn: 273623
This flag was introduced in r269655 with the new diagnostic handler for llc. Its
purpose was to keep the old behavior for some of the tests that didn't recover
well after an error. Those tests have been fixed, so now it's safe to remove the
flag entirely.
Fixes PR27759.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21368
llvm-svn: 273554
This patch changes single method of llvm-readobj.
It teaches SHT_GNU_verdef dumper to print version dependencies,
also it removes few fields from output that can be dumped with other keys
and slightly refactors code.
Testcase was also modified to match the changes.
Change is required for testcases of upcoming lld patches.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21552
llvm-svn: 273417
Try to be more clever about selecting the default format. When an existing
archive is used, use the type of the archive to determine the format. When
existing members are present, use the first member's format to determine the
format to use. If we are creating an empty archive (MRI mode) or are adding
non-object members, default to the current behaviour of using the host type due
to the lack of a better alternative. This aids in cross-compilation on Darwin
to non-Darwin platforms which rely on GNU format archives.
llvm-svn: 273373
This change is motivated by an upcoming change to the metadata representation
used for CFI. The indirect function call checker needs type information for
external function declarations in order to correctly generate jump table
entries for such declarations. We currently associate such type information
with declarations using a global metadata node, but I plan [1] to move all
such metadata to global object attachments.
In bitcode, metadata attachments for function declarations appear in the
global metadata block. This seems reasonable to me because I expect metadata
attachments on declarations to be uncommon. In the long term I'd also expect
this to be the case for CFI, because we'd want to use some specialized bitcode
format for this metadata that could be read as part of the ThinLTO thin-link
phase, which would mean that it would not appear in the global metadata block.
To solve the lazy loaded metadata issue I was seeing with D20147, I use the
same bitcode representation for metadata attachments for global variables as I
do for function declarations. Since there's a use case for metadata attachments
in the global metadata block, we might as well use that representation for
global variables as well, at least until we have a mechanism for lazy loading
global variables.
In the assembly format, the metadata attachments appear after the "declare"
keyword in order to avoid a parsing ambiguity.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-June/100462.html
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21052
llvm-svn: 273336
with the -macho and -universal-headers flags.
Just a follow on to r273207, I missed updating the printing of the fat magic
number when the universal file is a 64-bit universal file.
rdar://26899493
llvm-svn: 273324
Otherwise it gets linked in by one of the dependencies of shared
libraries which may be too late and we end up with weird crashes in
std::call_once().
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21478
llvm-svn: 273302
llvm-mc is a developer tool, as such it make sense for it to use new
features by default.
This doesn't change the user facing clang, which still defaults to non
relaxable relocations.
llvm-svn: 273014
This allows better catching of compiler errors since we can use
the override keyword to verify that methods are actually
overridden.
Also in this patch I've changed from storing a boolean Error
code everywhere to returning an llvm::Error, to propagate richer
error information up the call stack.
Reviewed By: ruiu, rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21410
llvm-svn: 272926
Summary:
The Mips implementation only covers the feature bits described by the ELF
e_flags so far. Mips stores additional feature bits such as MSA in the
.MIPS.abiflags section.
Also fixed a small bug this revealed where microMIPS wouldn't add the
EF_MIPS_MICROMIPS flag when using -filetype=obj.
Reviewers: echristo, rafael
Subscribers: rafael, mehdi_amini, dsanders, sdardis, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21125
llvm-svn: 272880
Summary:
This is necessary to keep the verifier happy after bugpoint removes an
initializer from a global variable with a comdat annotation, because
globals without initializers may not have comdats.
Reviewers: majnemer, rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21274
llvm-svn: 272854
It was printing out nothing in this case.
llvm-objdump tries to disassemble sections a symbol at a time. In the case of a
fully stripped Mach-O executable the only symbol remaining in the (__TEXT,__text)
section is the special linker defined symbol __mh_execute_header . This
symbol is special in that while it is N_SECT symbol in the (__TEXT,__text)
its address is before the start of the (__TEXT,__text). It’s address is the
start of the __TEXT segment which is where the mach header is statically
linked. So the code in DisassembleMachO() needs to deal with this case specially.
rdar://26778273
llvm-svn: 272837
Previously, there was a discrepancy between the population of function
passes in FPasses, and their invocation. Function passes specified on
the command line, after an optimizaton level was simply discared. This
fix PR27509.
Patch by Jesper Antonsson.
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20725
llvm-svn: 272770
If a local_unnamed_addr attribute is attached to a global, the address
is known to be insignificant within the module. It is distinct from the
existing unnamed_addr attribute in that it only describes a local property
of the module rather than a global property of the symbol.
This attribute is intended to be used by the code generator and LTO to allow
the linker to decide whether the global needs to be in the symbol table. It is
possible to exclude a global from the symbol table if three things are true:
- This attribute is present on every instance of the global (which means that
the normal rule that the global must have a unique address can be broken without
being observable by the program by performing comparisons against the global's
address)
- The global has linkonce_odr linkage (which means that each linkage unit must have
its own copy of the global if it requires one, and the copy in each linkage unit
must be the same)
- It is a constant or a function (which means that the program cannot observe that
the unique-address rule has been broken by writing to the global)
Although this attribute could in principle be computed from the module
contents, LTO clients (i.e. linkers) will normally need to be able to compute
this property as part of symbol resolution, and it would be inefficient to
materialize every module just to compute it.
See:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160509/356401.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160516/356738.html
for earlier discussion.
Part of the fix for PR27553.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20348
llvm-svn: 272709
This reverts commit 879139e1c6577b09df52de56a6bab856a19ed185.
This was committed accidentally when I blindly typed git svn
dcommit instead of the command to generate a patch.
llvm-svn: 272693
Summary: This also deprecated the get attribute function familly.
Reviewers: Wallbraker, whitequark, joker.eph, echristo, rafael, jyknight
Subscribers: axw, joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19181
llvm-svn: 272504
This is the next step towards being able to write PDBs.
MemoryBuffer is immutable, and StreamInterface is our replacement
which can be any combination of read-only, read-write, or write-only
depending on the particular implementation.
The one place where we were creating a PDBFile (in RawSession) is
updated to subclass ByteStream with a simple adapter that holds
a MemoryBuffer, and initializes the superclass with the buffer's
array, so that all the functionality of ByteStream works
transparently.
llvm-svn: 272370
This adds method and tests for writing to a PDB stream. With
this, even a PDB stream which is discontiguous can be treated
as a sequential stream of bytes for the purposes of writing.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21157
llvm-svn: 272369
Previously we could run only one machine pass with the run-pass option.
With that patch, we can now specify several passes with several run-pass
options (or just one option with a list of comma separated passes) and
llc will build the related pipeline.
This is great to test the interaction of two passes that are not
necessarily next to each other in the pipeline, or play with pass
ordering.
Now, we should be at parity with opt for the flexibility of running
passes.
Note: I also moved the run pass option from CommandFlags.h to llc.cpp
because, really, this is needed only there!
llvm-svn: 272356
This is made possible by removing an assert in llc that assumed
MIRParser::parseLLVMModule would exit on error. MIRParser's documentation states
that it returns null if a parsing error occurs, so there's no reason to assert.
We can instead just fall through to where the check for a module is performed
and exit if it is null.
This commit is part of the clean-up after r269655.
Fixes PR27770
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20371
llvm-svn: 272254
looking for it along $PATH. This allows installs of LLVM tools outside of
$PATH to find the symbolizer and produce pretty backtraces if they crash.
llvm-svn: 272232
As suggested by clang-tidy's performance-unnecessary-copy-initialization.
This can easily hit lifetime issues, so I audited every change and ran the
tests under asan, which came back clean.
llvm-svn: 272126
Changes since the initial commit:
- Use echo instead of printf. This should side-step the character
escaping issues on Windows.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20980
llvm-svn: 272068
SHT_GNU_verneed (.gnu.version_r) is a version dependency section.
It was the last symbol versioning relative section that was not dumped,
now it is.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21024
llvm-svn: 271998
In order to efficiently write PDBs, we need to be able to make a
StreamWriter class similar to a StreamReader, which can transparently deal
with writing to discontiguous streams, and we need to use this for all
writing, similar to how we use StreamReader for all reading.
Most discontiguous streams are the typical numbered streams that appear in
a PDB file and are described by the directory, but the exception to this,
that until now has been parsed by hand, is the directory itself.
MappedBlockStream works by querying the directory to find out which blocks
a stream occupies and various other things, so naturally the same logic
could not possibly work to describe the blocks that the directory itself
resided on.
To solve this, I've introduced an abstraction IPDBStreamData, which allows
the client to query for the list of blocks occupied by the stream, as well
as the stream length. I provide two implementations of this: one which
queries the directory (for indexed streams), and one which queries the
super block (for the directory stream).
This has the side benefit of vastly simplifying the code to parse the
directory. Whereas before a mini state machine was rolled by hand, now we
simply use FixedStreamArray to read out the stream sizes, then build a
vector of FixedStreamArrays for the stream map, all in just a few lines of
code.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21046
llvm-svn: 271982
Changes since the initial commit:
- Normalize file paths read from the file to prevent Windows path
separators from escaping parts of the path.
- Since we need to store the normalized file paths in WeightedFile,
don't do tricky things to keep the source MemoryBuffer alive.
- Don't use list-initialization for a std::string in WeightedFile.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20980
llvm-svn: 271953
Changes since the initial commit:
- Normalize file paths read from the file to prevent Windows path
separators from escaping parts of the path.
- Since we need to store the normalized file paths in WeightedFile,
don't do tricky things to keep the source MemoryBuffer alive.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20980
llvm-svn: 271949
This is the simplest possible patch to get some kind of YAML
output. All it dumps is the MSF header fields so that in
theory an empty MSF file could be reconstructed.
Reviewed By: ruiu, majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20971
llvm-svn: 271939
The data strucutre in the new FPO stream is described in the
PE/COFF spec. There is one record per function if frame pointer
is omitted.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20999
llvm-svn: 271926
and/or tests aren't working on Windows currently.
There seems to be some problem with quoting the file paths. I don't
understand the test structure here or the code well enough to try to
come up with a way to correctly handle paths with back slashes in them,
and this has caused the Windows builds to be failing for 7 hours now, so
I'm reverting the whole thing to bring them back to life. Sorry for the
disruption, but a couple of these were bug fixes anyways that can be
folded into a fresh commit.
Reverts the following patches:
r271756: Clean up the way we create the input filenames buffer (NFC)
r271748: Fix use-after-free from discarded MemoryBuffer (NFC)
r271710: Fix option description (NFC)
r271709: Add option to ingest filepaths from a file
llvm-svn: 271760
Create the buffer before calling parseInputFilenamesFile(), and add a
comment explaining why this is done.
Thanks to David Li for the suggestion!
llvm-svn: 271756
Summary:
Previously we would try to load PDBs for every PE executable we tried to
symbolize. If that failed, we would fall back to DWARF. If there wasn't
any DWARF, we'd print mostly useless symbol information using the export
table.
With this change, we only try to load PDBs for executables that claim to
have them. If that fails, we can now print an error rather than falling
back silently. This should make it a lot easier to diagnose and fix
common symbolization issues, such as not having DIA or not having a PDB.
Reviewers: zturner, eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20982
llvm-svn: 271725
This opens the door to introducing a YAML outputter which can be
used for machine consumption. Currently the yaml output style
is unimplemented and returns an error if you try to use it.
Reviewed By: rnk, ruiu
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20967
llvm-svn: 271712
This re-applies r271611, and hopefully the bots won't break this time.
Although ld64 always outputs linkedit data in the same order, it isn't actually required to. This change makes yaml2obj resilient if the offsets are in arbitrary order.
llvm-svn: 271687
When printing line information and file checksums, we were printing
the file offset field from the struct header. This teaches
llvm-pdbdump how to turn those numbers into the filename. In the
case of file checksums, this is done by looking in the global
string table. In the case of line contributions, this is done
by indexing into the file names buffer of the DBI stream. Why
they use a different technique I don't know.
llvm-svn: 271630
To facilitate this, a couple of changes had to be made:
1. `ModuleSubstream` got moved from `DebugInfo/PDB` to
`DebugInfo/CodeView`, and various codeview related types are defined
there. It turns out `DebugInfo/CodeView/Line.h` already defines many of
these structures, but this is really old code that is not endian aware,
doesn't interact well with `StreamInterface` and not very helpful for
getting stuff out of a PDB. Eventually we should migrate the old readobj
`COFFDumper` code to these new structures, or at least merge their
functionality somehow.
2. A `ModuleSubstream` visitor is introduced. Depending on where your
module substream array comes from, different subsets of record types can
be expected. We are already hand parsing these substream arrays in many
places especially in `COFFDumper.cpp`. In the future we can migrate these
paths to the visitor as well, which should reduce a lot of code in
`COFFDumper.cpp`.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20936
Reviewed By: ruiu, majnemer
llvm-svn: 271621
Although ld64 always outputs linkedit data in the same order, it isn't actually required to. This change makes yaml2obj resilient if the offsets are in arbitrary order.
llvm-svn: 271611
This commit adds round tripping for MachO symbol data. Symbols are entries in the name list, that contain offsets into the string table which is at the end of the __LINKEDIT segment.
llvm-svn: 271604