Adds the option 'new-pass-manager' to the gold pluggin to enable using the
new pass manager during the lto/thinlto link step.
Patch by Graham Yiu.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38517
llvm-svn: 314963
But now include a check for CPU_COUNT so we still build on 10 year old
versions of glibc.
Original message:
Use sched_getaffinity instead of std:🧵:hardware_concurrency.
The issue with std:🧵:hardware_concurrency is that it forwards
to libc and some implementations (like glibc) don't take thread
affinity into consideration.
With this change a llvm program that can execute in only 2 cores will
use 2 threads, even if the machine has 32 cores.
This makes benchmarking a lot easier, but should also help if someone
doesn't want to use all cores for compilation for example.
llvm-svn: 314931
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D38138.
I fixed the capitalization of some functions because we're changing those
lines anyway and that helped verify that we weren't accidentally dropping
any options by using default param values.
llvm-svn: 314930
Summary:
This reverts D38481. The change breaks systems with older versions of glibc. It
injects a use of CPU_COUNT() from sched.h without checking to ensure that the
function exists first.
Reviewers:
Subscribers:
llvm-svn: 314922
Somehow a few massive errors slipped though the cracks of testing.
1. The code in Segment::finalize was left over from the old layout
algorithm. In certain situations this would cause very strange issues
with segment layout. For instance in the shift-segments.test case it
would cause the second segment to have the same offset as the first.
2. In debugging this I discovered another issue. Namely section alignment
was not being computed based on Section->Align but instead
Section->Offset which is bizarre and makes no sense. I have no clue how
it worked in the first place. This issue is also fixed
3. Fixing #2 exposed a bug where things were not being written past the end
of the file that technically should have been. This was because in
certain cases (like overlapping-segments) the end of the file wouldn't
always be bumped if the offset could be chosen relative to an existing
segment that already had it's offset chosen. For fully nested segments
this is fine but for overlapping segments this leaves the end of the
file short. So I changed how the offset is bumped when looping though
segments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38436
llvm-svn: 314918
The test fails on Linux; see follow-up email on the llvm-commits list.
> Add the option to lookup an address in the debug information and print
> out the file, function, block and line table details.
>
> Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38409
This also reverts the follow-up r314818:
> [test] Fix llvm-dwarfdump/cmdline.test
>
> Fixes test/tools/llvm-dwarfdump/cmdline.test
llvm-svn: 314825
The list of register ids was previously written out in a couple of dirrent
places. This puts it in a .def file and also adds a few more registers (e.g.
the x87 regs) which should lead to more readable dumps, but I didn't include
the whole list since that seems unnecessary.
X86_MC::initLLVMToSEHAndCVRegMapping is pretty ugly, but at least it's not
relying on magic constants anymore. The TODO of using tablegen still stands.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38480
llvm-svn: 314821
Add the option to lookup an address in the debug information and print
out the file, function, block and line table details.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38409
llvm-svn: 314817
The issue with std:🧵:hardware_concurrency is that it forwards
to libc and some implementations (like glibc) don't take thread
affinity into consideration.
With this change a llvm program that can execute in only 2 cores will
use 2 threads, even if the machine has 32 cores.
This makes benchmarking a lot easier, but should also help if someone
doesn't want to use all cores for compilation for example.
llvm-svn: 314809
This came out of a recent discussion on llvm-dev
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D38042). Currently the Verifier will strip
the debug info metadata from a module if it finds the dbeug info to be
malformed. This feature is very valuable since it allows us to improve
the Verifier by making it stricter without breaking bcompatibility,
but arguable the Verifier pass should not be modifying the IR. This
patch moves the stripping of broken debug info into AutoUpgrade
(UpgradeDebugInfo to be precise), which is a much better location for
this since the stripping of malformed (i.e., produced by older, buggy
versions of Clang) is a (harsh) form of AutoUpgrade.
This change is mostly NFC in nature, the one big difference is the
behavior when LLVM module passes are introducing malformed debug
info. Prior to this patch, a NoAsserts build would have printed a
warning and stripped the debug info, after this patch the Verifier
will report a fatal error. I believe this behavior is actually more
desirable anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38184
llvm-svn: 314699
This is now able to serialize DIALOG and DIALOGEX resources to .res
files. It still can't parse dialog-specific CAPTION, FONT, and STYLE
optional statement - these will be added in the following patch.
A limited set of controls is included. However, more can be easily added
by extending SupportedCtls map defined in ResourceScriptStmt.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37862
llvm-svn: 314578
This allows MENU resources to be serialized.
MENU resource statement doc:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381025.aspx
POPUP sub-statement doc:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381030.aspx
MENUITEM sub-statement doc:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381024.aspx
MENUHEADER structure:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms648018.aspx (and
NORMALMENUITEM, POPUPMENUITEM structs).
Thanks for Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37828
llvm-svn: 314562
This allows llvm-rc to serialize ACCELERATORS resources.
Additionally, as this is the first type of resource to support basic
optional resource statements (LANGUAGE, CHARACTERISTICS, VERSION),
ACCELERATORS statement documentation:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa380610.aspx
Accelerator table structure documentation:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms648010.aspx
Optional resource statement fields are described in:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms648027.aspx
Thanks for Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37824
llvm-svn: 314549
This is a part of llvm-rc serialization patch set (serialization, pt 1.5).
This:
* Unifies the internal representation of flags in ACCELERATORS and MENU
with the corresponding representation in .res files (noticed in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37828#inline-329828).
* Creates an RCResource subclass, OptStatementsRCResource, describing
resource statements that can declare resource-local optional statements
(proposed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D37824#inline-329775).
These modifications don't fit to any of the current patches, so I'm
submitting them as a separate patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37841
llvm-svn: 314541
This allows to process HTML resources defined in .rc scripts and output
them to resulting .res files. Additionally, some infrastructure allowing
to output these files is created.
This is the first resource type we can operate on.
Thanks to Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: reviews.llvm.org/D37283
llvm-svn: 314538
I've seen cases where tiny inlined functions have such a high execution count
that most everything would show up with a relative of hotness of 0%. Since
the inlined functions effectively disappear you need to tune in the lower
range, thus we need more precision.
llvm-svn: 314537
This is slightly less verbose for the common case of a single build directory
and more intuitive when using this API directly from the interpreter.
llvm-svn: 314491
Previous patch fixed one of LLVM buildbots (lld-x86_64-win7).
However, some others have already been failing because of make_unique
compilation error (llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win).
llvm-svn: 314480
This allows llvm-rc to parse user-defined resources (ref:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381054.aspx).
These statements either import files, or put the specified raw data in
the resulting resource file.
Thanks to Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37033
llvm-svn: 314478
This allows the ints to be written as integer expressions evaluating to
unsigned 16-bit/32-bit integers.
All the expressions may use the following operators: + - & | ~, and
parentheses. Minus token - can be also unary. There is no precedence of
the operators other than the unary operators binding stronger than their
binary counterparts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37022
llvm-svn: 314477
This extends the set of llvm-rc parser's available resources by
another one, VERSIONINFO.
Ref: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381058.aspx
Thanks to Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37021
llvm-svn: 314468
This patch implements the dwarfdump option --find=<name>. This option
looks for a DIE in the accelerator tables and dumps it if found. This
initial patch only adds support for .apple_names to keep the review
small, adding the other sections and pubnames support should be
trivial though.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38282
llvm-svn: 314439
Before this change using any of the -name*= command line options with an output
directory would result in a single file (functions.txt/functions.html)
containing the coverage for those specific functions. Now you get the same
directory structure as when not using any -name*= options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38280
llvm-svn: 314396
Before this change using any of the -name*= command line options with an output
directory would result in a single file (functions.txt/functions.html)
containing the coverage for those specific functions. Now you get the same
directory structure as when not using any -name*= options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38280
llvm-svn: 314310
This was intended to be no-functional-change, but it's not - there's a test diff.
So I thought I should stop here and post it as-is to see if this looks like what was expected
based on the discussion in PR34603:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34603
Notes:
1. The test improvement occurs because the existing 'LateSimplifyCFG' marker is not carried
through the recursive calls to 'SimplifyCFG()->SimplifyCFGOpt().run()->SimplifyCFG()'.
The parameter isn't passed down, so we pick up the default value from the function signature
after the first level. I assumed that was a bug, so I've passed 'Options' down in all of the
'SimplifyCFG' calls.
2. I split 'LateSimplifyCFG' into 2 bits: ConvertSwitchToLookupTable and KeepCanonicalLoops.
This would theoretically allow us to differentiate the transforms controlled by those params
independently.
3. We could stash the optional AssumptionCache pointer and 'LoopHeaders' pointer in the struct too.
I just stopped here to minimize the diffs.
4. Similarly, I stopped short of messing with the pass manager layer. I have another question that
could wait for the follow-up: why is the new pass manager creating the pass with LateSimplifyCFG
set to true no matter where in the pipeline it's creating SimplifyCFG passes?
// Create an early function pass manager to cleanup the output of the
// frontend.
EarlyFPM.addPass(SimplifyCFGPass());
-->
/// \brief Construct a pass with the default thresholds
/// and switch optimizations.
SimplifyCFGPass::SimplifyCFGPass()
: BonusInstThreshold(UserBonusInstThreshold),
LateSimplifyCFG(true) {} <-- switches get converted to lookup tables and loops may not be in canonical form
If this is unintended, then it's possible that the current behavior of dropping the 'LateSimplifyCFG'
setting via recursion was masking this bug.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38138
llvm-svn: 314308
Summary:
A new FDR metadata record will support logging a function call argument;
appending multiple metadata records will represent a sequence of arguments
meaning that "holes" are not representable by the buffer format. Each
call argument is currently a 64-bit value (useful for "this" pointers and
synchronization objects).
If present, we put this argument to the function call "entry" record it
belongs to, and alter its type to notify the user of its presence.
Reviewers: dberris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32840
llvm-svn: 314269
This change adds support for dynamic relocations (allocated
SHT_REL/SHT_RELA sections with a dynamic symbol table as their link).
I had to reland this because of a I wasn't initilizing some pointers.
llvm-svn: 314263
This patch adds logic to follow a symbol's aliases when the symbol name
cannot be found in the current object file. It checks the main binary
for the symbol's address and queries the current object for its aliases
(symbols with the same address) before printing out a warning.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38230
llvm-svn: 314198
llvm-cov's report mode does not print any output when -show-functions is
specified and no source files are specified. This can be surprising, so
the tool should at least print out an error message when this happens.
rdar://problem/34636859
llvm-svn: 314175
Summary:
Sanitizer blacklist entries currently apply to all sanitizers--there
is no way to specify that an entry should only apply to a specific
sanitizer. This is important for Control Flow Integrity since there are
several different CFI modes that can be enabled at once. For maximum
security, CFI blacklist entries should be scoped to only the specific
CFI mode(s) that entry applies to.
Adding section headers to SpecialCaseLists allows users to specify more
information about list entries, like sanitizer names or other metadata,
like so:
[section1]
fun:*fun1*
[section2|section3]
fun:*fun23*
The section headers are regular expressions. For backwards compatbility,
blacklist entries entered before a section header are put into the '[*]'
section so that blacklists without sections retain the same behavior.
SpecialCaseList has been modified to also accept a section name when
matching against the blacklist. It has also been modified so the
follow-up change to clang can define a derived class that allows
matching sections by SectionMask instead of by string.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, eugenis, vsk
Reviewed By: eugenis, vsk
Subscribers: vitalybuka, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37924
llvm-svn: 314170
This change refactors some of the code to allow for some code
deduplication in later diffs as well as just to make adding a new
section type more self contained to the class itself. The idea for this
was first mentioned by James in D 37915 and will be used in that change
as recommended.
This change follows changes for dynamic sections but precedes support
for dynamic relocations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38008
llvm-svn: 314148
Summary: Previously we would dereference Symtab without checking for null.
Reviewers: davide, atanasyan, rafael
Reviewed By: davide, atanasyan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38080
llvm-svn: 313970
This patch adds the -o and --out-file options for compatibility with
Darwin's dwarfdump.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38125
llvm-svn: 313969
in the second slice of a Mach-O universal file.
The code in llvm-objdump in in DisassembleMachO() was getting the default
CPU then incorrectly setting into the global variable used for the -mcpu option
if that was not set. This caused a second call to DisassembleMachO() to use
the wrong default CPU when disassembling the next slice in a Mach-O universal
file. And would result in bad disassembly and an error message about an
recognized processor for the target:
% llvm-objdump -d -m -arch all fat.macho-armv7s-arm64
fat.macho-armv7s-arm64 (architecture armv7s):
(__TEXT,__text) section
armv7:
0: 60 47 bx r12
fat.macho-armv7s-arm64 (architecture arm64):
'cortex-a7' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
'cortex-a7' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
(__TEXT,__text) section
___multc3:
0: .long 0x1e620810
rdar://34439149
llvm-svn: 313921
The previous version of dumper implemented UTF-16 byte swap incorrectly
on big-endian machines. This now gets fixed.
Thanks to Bill Seurer for testing the patch locally.
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38150
llvm-svn: 313912
This patch prevents dsymutil from resolving a reference to a NULL DIE
when a bogus reference happens to be coincidentally referencing a NULL
DIE. Now this is detected as an invalid reference and a warning is
printed.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33873
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38078
llvm-svn: 313872
Passing "-dump" to llvm-cov will now print more detailed information
about function hash and counter mismatches. This should make it easier
to debug *.profdata files which contain incorrect records, and to debug
other scenarios where coverage goes missing due to mismatch issues.
llvm-svn: 313853
Summary: Resubmission of D37937. Fixed i386 target building (conversion from std::size_t& to uint64_t& failed). Fixed documentation warning failure about docs/CFIVerify.rst not being in the tree.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Patch by Mitch Phillips
Subscribers: sbc100, mgorny, pcc, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38089
llvm-svn: 313809
Summary: Resubmission of D37937. Fixed i386 target building (conversion from std::size_t& to uint64_t& failed). Fixed documentation warning failure about docs/CFIVerify.rst not being in the tree.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Patch by Mitch Phillips
Subscribers: mgorny, pcc, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38089
llvm-svn: 313798
Add adds support for naming data segments. This is useful
useful linkers so that they can merge similar sections.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37886
llvm-svn: 313795
This enables readobj to output Windows resource files (.res). This way,
we'll be able to test .res outputs without comparing them byte-by-byte
with "magic binary files" generated by MS toolchain.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38058
llvm-svn: 313790
This patch implements the Darwin dwarfdump option --recurse-depth=<N>,
which limits the recursion depth when selectively printing DIEs at an
offset.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38064
llvm-svn: 313778
I overzealously landed this before I was sure that another change
wouldn't break the build that this change depends on.
This change adds support for sections involved in dynamic loading such
as SHT_DYNAMIC, SHT_DYNSYM, and allocated string tables.
The two added binaries used for tests can be downloaded here and here
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36560
llvm-svn: 313767
Add adds support for naming data segments. This is useful
useful linkers so that they can merge similar sections.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37886
llvm-svn: 313692
Summary: Introduces the llvm-cfi-verify tool to llvm. Includes the design document (docs/CFIVerify.rst). Current implementation of the tool is simply a disassembler that identifies and prints the indirect control flow instructions.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Patch by Mitch Phillips
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc, pcc, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37937
llvm-svn: 313688
I didn't initialize a pointer to be nullptr that I needed to.
This change adds support for nested and even overlapping segments. This means
that PT_PHDR, PT_GNU_RELRO, PT_TLS, and PT_DYNAMIC can be supported properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36558
llvm-svn: 313682
This change adds support for nested and even overlapping segments. This means
that PT_PHDR, PT_GNU_RELRO, PT_TLS, and PT_DYNAMIC can be supported properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36558
llvm-svn: 313656
Move logic that allows for Triple deduction from an ObjectFile object
out of llvm-objdump.cpp into a public factory, found in the ObjectFile
class.
This should allow other tools in the future to use this logic without
reimplementation.
Patch by Mitch Phillips
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37719
llvm-svn: 313605
After clang started emitting deferred regions (r312818), llvm-cov has
had a hard time picking reasonable line execuction counts. There have
been one or two generic improvements in this area (e.g r310012), but
line counts can still report coverage for whitespace instead of code
(llvm.org/PR34612).
To fix the problem:
* Introduce a new region kind so that frontends can explicitly label
gap areas.
This is done by changing the encoding of the columnEnd field of
MappingRegion. This doesn't substantially increase binary size, and
makes it easy to maintain backwards-compatibility.
* Don't set the line count to a count from a gap area, unless the count
comes from a wrapped segment.
* Don't highlight gap areas as uncovered.
Fixes llvm.org/PR34612.
llvm-svn: 313597
This patch makes the `.eh_frame` extension an alias for `.debug_frame`.
Up till now it was only possible to dump the section using objdump, but
not with dwarfdump. Since the two are essentially interchangeable, we
dump whichever of the two is present.
As a workaround, this patch also adds parsing for 3 currently
unimplemented CFA instructions: `DW_CFA_def_cfa_expression`,
`DW_CFA_expression`, and `DW_CFA_val_expression`. Because I lack the
required knowledge, I just parse the fields without actually creating
the instructions.
Finally, this also fixes the typo in the `.debug_frame` section name
which incorrectly contained a trailing `s`.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37852
llvm-svn: 313530
Summary:
This change adds support for explicit tail-exit records to be written by
the XRay runtime. This lets us differentiate the tail exit
records/events in the log, and allows us to treat those exit events
especially in the future. For now we allow printing those out in YAML
(and reading them in).
Reviewers: kpw, pelikan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37964
llvm-svn: 313514
readelf tool reports an error when output contains the same section
in multiple COMDAT groups. That can be useful.
Path teaches llvm-readobj to do the same.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37567
llvm-svn: 313459
This is the first of many commits that enable selectively dumping just
one record from the debug info.
This reapplies r313412 with some extra qualification to appease GCC and MSVC.
llvm-svn: 313419
* Fix an unsigned integer overflow in the logic that computes the
number of uncovered lines in a function.
* When aggregating region and line coverage summaries, take into account
that different instantiations may have a different number of regions.
The new test case provides test coverage for both bugs. I also verified
this change by preparing a coverage report for a stage2 build of llc --
the new assertions should detect any outstanding over-counting bugs.
Fixes PR34613.
llvm-svn: 313417
There's a bug in the way the line and region summary objects are merged.
It would have been less likely to occur if those objects kept some data
private.
llvm-svn: 313416
The "NotCovered" fields in the region and line summary structs are
redundant. We should remove them to make the code clearer.
As a follow-up, the "NotCovered" entries should be removed from the
reports as well.
llvm-svn: 313415
It enables OptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis and MachineOptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis to return true not only for -fsave-optimization-record but when specific remarks are requested with
command line options.
The diagnostic handler used to be callback now this patch adds a class
DiagnosticHandler. It has virtual method to provide custom diagnostic handler
and methods to control which particular remarks are enabled.
However LLVM-C API users can still provide callback function for diagnostic handler.
llvm-svn: 313390
It enables OptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis and MachineOptimizationRemarkEmitter::allowExtraAnalysis to return true not only for -fsave-optimization-record but when specific remarks are requested with
command line options.
The diagnostic handler used to be callback now this patch adds a class
DiagnosticHandler. It has virtual method to provide custom diagnostic handler
and methods to control which particular remarks are enabled.
However LLVM-C API users can still provide callback function for diagnostic handler.
llvm-svn: 313382
With fix in formatting for GNU style output.
Original commit message:
This refactors GNUStyle<ELFT>::printGroupSections and
LLVMStyle<ELFT>::printGroupSections to split out all
duplicated code.
After the change these methods just prints the data provided
by introduced getGroups in a corresponding LLVM/GNU format.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37621
llvm-svn: 313236
This refactors GNUStyle<ELFT>::printGroupSections and
LLVMStyle<ELFT>::printGroupSections to split out all
duplicated code.
After the change these methods just prints the data provided
by introduced getGroups in a corresponding LLVM/GNU format.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37621
llvm-svn: 313234
Since users typically don't really care about the .dwo / non.dwo
distinction, this patch makes it so dwarfdump --debug-<info,...> dumps
.debug_info and (if available) also .debug_info.dwo. This simplifies
the command line interface (I've removed all dwo-specific dump
options) and makes the tool friendlier to use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37771
llvm-svn: 313207
The code in llvm-nm for Mach-O files to determine the section type for an
N_SECT type symbol it will call getSymbolSection() and check for the error,
but in the case the n_sect value is zero it will return section_end() (aka nullptr).
And the code was using that and crashing instead of just returning a ’s’ for a
section or printing (?,?) as it would if getSymbolSection() returned an error.
rdar://33136604
llvm-svn: 313193
Summary:
Change the type of the Redirects parameter of llvm::sys::ExecuteAndWait,
ExecuteNoWait and other APIs that wrap them from `const StringRef **` to
`ArrayRef<Optional<StringRef>>`, which is safer and simplifies the use of these
APIs (no more local StringRef variables just to get a pointer to).
Corresponding clang changes will be posted as a separate patch.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: vsk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37563
llvm-svn: 313155
Summary: Detected by LeakSanitizer for Darwin
Reviewers: enderby, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37750
llvm-svn: 313146
This patches renames "brief" to "verbose" in de DIDumpOptions and
inverts the logic to match the new behavior where brief is the default.
Changing the default value uncovered some bugs related to the
DIDumpOptions not being propagated and have been fixed as well.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37745
llvm-svn: 313139
As discussed on llvm-commits it was decided it would be best to check
e_machine before declaring that a reserved section index is valid. The
only special e_machine value that matters here is EM_HEXAGON. This
change adds a special check for EM_HEXAGON.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37767
llvm-svn: 313114
Summary:
This is nessesary in Python3. Everywhere else we assume that
encoding is UTF8. If we don't specify it here, the defaults
from the environment will be used, which may result in ASCII
decoder being used. And if the file is non-ASCII, then it
will crash:
```
File "/usr/local/bin/coverage-report-server.py", line 168, in do_GET
for line_no, line in enumerate(f, start=1)])
File "/usr/local/bin/coverage-report-server.py", line 165, in <listcomp>
["<span class='{cls}'>{line} </span>".format(
File "/usr/lib/python3.5/encodings/ascii.py", line 26, in decode
return codecs.ascii_decode(input, self.errors)[0]
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc3 in position 106: ordinal not in range(128)
```
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33548
Now, how would i add a testcase here?
Reviewers: m.ostapenko, kcc
Reviewed By: kcc
Subscribers: kcc, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37661
llvm-svn: 313063
As discussed on llvm-dev in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-September/117301.html
this changes the command line interface of llvm-dwarfdump to match the
one used by the dwarfdump utility shipping on macOS. In addition to
being shorter to type this format also has the advantage of allowing
more than one section to be specified at the same time.
In a nutshell, with this change
$ llvm-dwarfdump --debug-dump=info
$ llvm-dwarfdump --debug-dump=apple-objc
becomes
$ dwarfdump --debug-info --apple-objc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37714
llvm-svn: 312970
Region coverage is difficult to explain without going deep into how
coverage is implemented. Instantiation coverage is easier to explain,
but probably not useful in most cases (templates don't exist in C, and
most C++ code contains relatively few templates).
This patch adds the options "-show-region-summary" and
"-show-instantiation-summary" to allow hiding those columns.
"-show-instantiation-summary" is turned off by default.
llvm-svn: 312969
Make sure that the text and html emitters always emit the same set of
region markers, and avoid emitting redundant markers for line segments
which don't end on the line they start on.
This is related to D35925, and depends on D36014
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36020
llvm-svn: 312813
Most callers were not expecting the exit(0) and trying to exit with a
different value.
This also adds back the call to cl::PrintHelpMessage in llvm-ar.
llvm-svn: 312761
As is indexes above SHN_LORESERVE will not be handled correctly because
they'll be treated as indexes of sections rather than special values
that should just be copied. This change adds support to copy them
though.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37393
llvm-svn: 312756
Right now Symbols must be either undefined or defined in a specific
section. Some symbols have section indexes like SHN_ABS however. This
change adds support for outputting symbols that have such section
indexes.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37391
llvm-svn: 312745
It is possible for two modules to have the same name if they are
archive members with the same name, or if we are doing LTO (in which
case all modules will have the name "lto.tmp").
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37589
llvm-svn: 312744
Second try after fixing a code san problem with iterator reference types.
This change introduces a subcommand to the llvm-xray tool called
"stacks" which allows for analysing XRay traces provided as inputs and
accounting time to stacks instead of just individual functions. This
gives us a more precise view of where in a program the latency is
actually attributed.
The tool uses a trie data structure to keep track of the caller-callee
relationships as we process the XRay traces. In particular, we keep
track of the function call stack as we enter functions. While we're
doing this we're adding nodes in a trie and indicating a "calls"
relatinship between the caller (current top of the stack) and the callee
(the new top of the stack). When we push function ids onto the stack, we
keep track of the timestamp (TSC) for the enter event.
When exiting functions, we are able to account the duration by getting
the difference between the timestamp of the exit event and the
corresponding entry event in the stack. This works even if we somehow
miss the exit events for intermediary functions (i.e. if the exit event
is not cleanly associated with the enter event at the top of the stack).
The output of the tool currently provides just the top N leaf functions
that contribute the most latency, and the top N stacks that have the
most frequency. In the future we can provide more sophisticated query
mechanisms and potentially an export to database feature to make offline
analysis of the stack traces possible with existing tools.
Differential revision: D34863
llvm-svn: 312733
This change adds support for SHT_REL and SHT_RELA sections in
llvm-objcopy.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36554
llvm-svn: 312680
This change adds support for SHT_REL and SHT_RELA sections in
llvm-objcopy.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36554
llvm-svn: 312643
Without this we would have multiple relocations pointing to symbols
with the same name: the empty string. There was no way for yaml2obj to
be able to handle that.
A more general solution would be to unique symbol names in a similar
way to how we unique section names. In practice I think this covers
all common cases and is a bit more user friendly than using names like
sym1, sym2, sym3, etc.
llvm-svn: 312603
Without this patch passing a .o file with multiple sections with the
same name to obj2yaml produces a yaml file that yaml2obj cannot
handle. This is pr34162.
The problem is that when specifying, for example, the section of a
symbol, we get only
Section: foo
and don't know which of the sections whose name is foo we have to use.
One alternative would be to use section numbers. This would work, but
the output from obj2yaml would be very inconvenient to edit as
deleting a section would invalidate all indexes.
Another alternative would be to invent a unique section id that would
exist only on yaml. This would work, but seems a bit heavy handed. We
could make the id optional and default it to the section name.
Since in the last alternative the id is basically what this patch uses
as a name, it can be implemented as a followup patch if needed.
llvm-svn: 312585
code duplication in the client, and improve error propagation.
This patch moves the OrcRemoteTarget rpc::Function declarations from
OrcRemoteTargetRPCAPI into their own namespaces under llvm::orc::remote so that
they can be used in new contexts (in particular, a remote-object-file adapter
layer that I will commit shortly).
Code duplication in OrcRemoteTargetClient (especially in loops processing the
code, rw-data and ro-data allocations) is removed by moving the loop bodies
into their own functions.
Error propagation is (slightly) improved by adding an ErrorReporter functor to
the OrcRemoteTargetClient -- Errors that can't be returned (because they occur
in destructors, or behind stable APIs that don't provide error returns) can be
sent to the ErrorReporter instead. Some methods in the Client API are also
changed to make better use of the Expected class: returning Expected<T>s rather
than returning Errors and taking T&s to store the results.
llvm-svn: 312500
This change introduces a subcommand to the llvm-xray tool called
"stacks" which allows for analysing XRay traces provided as inputs and
accounting time to stacks instead of just individual functions. This
gives us a more precise view of where in a program the latency is
actually attributed.
The tool uses a trie data structure to keep track of the caller-callee
relationships as we process the XRay traces. In particular, we keep
track of the function call stack as we enter functions. While we're
doing this we're adding nodes in a trie and indicating a "calls"
relatinship between the caller (current top of the stack) and the callee
(the new top of the stack). When we push function ids onto the stack, we
keep track of the timestamp (TSC) for the enter event.
When exiting functions, we are able to account the duration by getting
the difference between the timestamp of the exit event and the
corresponding entry event in the stack. This works even if we somehow
miss the exit events for intermediary functions (i.e. if the exit event
is not cleanly associated with the enter event at the top of the stack).
The output of the tool currently provides just the top N leaf functions
that contribute the most latency, and the top N stacks that have the
most frequency. In the future we can provide more sophisticated query
mechanisms and potentially an export to database feature to make offline
analysis of the stack traces possible with existing tools.
llvm-svn: 312426
FuzzMutate might not be the best place for these, but it makes more
sense than an entirely new library for now. This will make setting up
fuzz targets with consistent CLI handling easier.
llvm-svn: 312425
The binutils utility dwp has an option "-e"
https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/DebugFissionDWP
to specify an executable/library to get the list
of *.dwo files from it. This option is particularly useful when
someone runs the tool manually outside of a build system.
This diff adds an implementation of "-e" to llvm-dwp.
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37371
llvm-svn: 312409
We have llvm-readobj for dumping CodeView from object files, and
llvm-pdbutil has always been more focused on PDB. However,
llvm-pdbutil has a lot of useful options for summarizing debug
information in aggregate and presenting high level statistical
views. Furthermore, it's arguably better as a testing tool since
we don't have to write tests to conform to a state-machine like
structure where you match multiple lines in succession, each
depending on a previous match. llvm-pdbutil dumps much more
concisely, so it's possible to use single-line matches in many
cases where as with readobj tests you have to use multi-line
matches with an implicit state machine.
Because of this, I'm adding object file support to llvm-pdbutil.
In fact, this mirrors the cvdump tool from Microsoft, which also
supports both object files and pdb files. In the future we could
perhaps rename this tool llvm-cvutil.
In the meantime, this allows us to deep dive into object files
the same way we already can with PDB files.
llvm-svn: 312358
It's non-trivial to use weak symbols in a cross platform way (See
sanitizer_win_defs.h in compiler-rt), and doing it naively like we
have here causes some build failures:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-with-thin-lto-windows/builds/1260
Instead of going down the rabbit hole of emulating weak symbols for
this very trivial dummy fuzzer driver, we can just rely on the fact
that we know which hooks any given fuzz target implements and forward
declare a normal symbol.
llvm-svn: 312354
This should fix the undefined reference to WriteBitcodeToFile here:
http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/i686-mingw32-RA-on-linux/builds/31682
(Why does every different bot seem to have a different level of
finickiness about LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS?)
llvm-svn: 312345
This adds a dummy main so we can build and run the llvm-isel-fuzzer
functionality when we aren't building LLVM with coverage. The approach
here should serve as a template to stop in-tree fuzzers from
bitrotting (See llvm.org/pr34314).
Note that I'll probably move most of the logic in DummyISelFuzzer's
`main` to a library so it's easy to reuse it in other fuzz targets,
but I'm planning on doing that in a follow up that also consolidates
argument handling in our LLVMFuzzerInitialize implementations.
llvm-svn: 312338
This adds a new command line option, -udt-stats, which breaks
down the stats of S_UDT records. These are one of the biggest
contributors to the size of /DEBUG:FASTLINK PDBs, so they need
some additional tools to be able to analyze their usage. This
option will dig into each S_UDT record and determine what kind
of record it points to, and then break down the statistics by
the target type. The goal here is to identify how our object
files differ from MSVC object files in S_UDT records, so that
we can output fewer of them and reach size parity.
llvm-svn: 312276
This patch completes the work done by Frederic Riss to addresses
dsymutil incorrectly considering forward declaration as canonical during
uniquing. This resulted in references to the forward declaration even
after the definition was encountered.
In addition to the test provided by Alexander Shaposhnikov in D29609, I
added another test to cover several scenarios that were mentioned in his
conversation with Fred. We now also check that uniquing still occurs
after the definition was encountered.
For more context please refer to D29609
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37127
llvm-svn: 312274
This patch completes the work done by Frederic Riss to addresses
dsymutil incorrectly considering forward declaration as canonical during
uniquing. This resulted in references to the forward declaration even
after the definition was encountered.
In addition to the test provided by Alexander Shaposhnikov in D29609, I
added another test to cover several scenarios that were mentioned in his
conversation with Fred. We now also check that uniquing still occurs
after the definition was encountered.
For more context please refer to D29609
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37127
llvm-svn: 312264
This patch changes the default behavior in brief mode to only show the
debug_info section. This is undoubtedly the most popular and likely the
one you'd want in brief mode.
Non-brief mode behavior is not affected and still defaults to all.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37334
llvm-svn: 312252
Summary: Add a -name-whitelist option, which behaves in the same way as -name, but it reads in multiple function names from the given input file(s).
Reviewers: vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37111
llvm-svn: 312227
Summary:
Before this patch, llvm-xray account will assume that thread stacks will
not be empty. Unfortunately there are cases where an instrumented
function will see a call to `fork()` which will cause the child process
to not see the start of the function, but only see the end of the
function. The tooling cannot assume that threads will always have
perfect stacks, and so we change it to support this reality.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31870
llvm-svn: 312204
This moves the cmake configuration for fuzzers in LLVM to a new macro,
add_llvm_fuzzer. This will make it easier to keep things consistent
while implementing llvm.org/pr34314.
I've also made a couple of minor functional changes here:
- the fuzzers now use add_llvm_executable rather than add_llvm_tool.
This means they won't create install targets and stuff like that,
because those made little sense for these fuzzers.
- I've grouped these under "Fuzzers" rather than in with "Tools" for
people who build with IDEs.
llvm-svn: 312200
All this does is forward declare the interface functions (and make
sure that they're `extern "C"`), but since we're using libFuzzer from
the toolchain it doesn't make sense to include the local copy of the
interface.
llvm-svn: 312195
Some kinds of relocations do not have symbols, like R_X86_64_RELATIVE
for instance. I would like to test this case in D36554 but currently
can't because symbols are required by yaml2obj. The other option is
using the empty symbol but that doesn't seem quite right to me.
This change makes the Symbol field of Relocation optional and in the
case where the user does not specify a symbol name the Symbol index is 0.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37276
llvm-svn: 312192
writeArchive returned a pair, but the first element of the pair is always
its first argument on failure, so it doesn't make sense to return it from
the function. This patch change the return type so that it does't return it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37313
llvm-svn: 312177
Summary:
Based on Fred's patch here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D6771
I can't seem to commandeer the old review, so I'm creating a new one.
With that change the locations exrpessions are pretty printed inline in the
DIE tree. The output looks like this for debug_loc entries:
DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_data4] (0x00000000
0x0000000000000001 - 0x000000000000000b: DW_OP_consts +3
0x000000000000000b - 0x0000000000000012: DW_OP_consts +7
0x0000000000000012 - 0x000000000000001b: DW_OP_reg0 RAX, DW_OP_piece 0x4
0x000000000000001b - 0x0000000000000024: DW_OP_breg5 RDI+0)
And like this for debug_loc.dwo entries:
DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_sec_offset] (0x00000000
Addr idx 2 (w/ length 190): DW_OP_consts +0, DW_OP_stack_value
Addr idx 3 (w/ length 23): DW_OP_reg0 RAX, DW_OP_piece 0x4)
Simple locations without ranges are printed inline:
DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_block1] (DW_OP_reg4 RSI, DW_OP_piece 0x4, DW_OP_bit_piece 0x20 0x0)
The debug_loc(.dwo) dumping in changed accordingly to factor the code.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, friss
Subscribers: mgorny, javed.absar, hiraditya, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37123
llvm-svn: 312042
Since these aren't built by default unless building with coverage (and
even then they aren't built for the check target) they've managed to
bit rot a little.
This just fixes the build. See llvm.org/pr34314 for the plan on making
sure these don't bit rot again.
llvm-svn: 312011
This extends the set of resources parsed by llvm-rc by DIALOG and
DIALOGEX.
Additionally, three optional resource statements specific to these two
resources are added: CAPTION, FONT, and STYLE.
Thanks for Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36905
llvm-svn: 312009
This implements a fuzzer tool for instruction selection, as described
in my [EuroLLVM 2017 talk][1].
The fuzzer must be given both libFuzzer args and llc-like args to
configure the backend. For example, to fuzz AArch64 GlobalISel at -O0,
you could invoke like so:
llvm-isel-fuzzer <corpus dirs> -ignore_remaining_args=1 \
-mtriple arm64-apple-ios -global-isel -O0
If you would like to seed the fuzzer with an initial corpus, simply
provide a directory of valid LLVM bitcode (not textual IR) as one of
the corpus dirs.
[1]: http://llvm.org/devmtg/2017-03//2017/02/20/accepted-sessions.html#2
llvm-svn: 311964
This extends llvm-rc parsing tool by MENU resource
(msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381025(v=vs.85).aspx).
As for now, MENUEX
(msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381023(v=vs.85).aspx)
seems unnecessary.
Thanks for Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36898
llvm-svn: 311956
This improves the current llvm-rc parser by the ability of parsing
ACCELERATORS statement.
Moreover, some small improvements to the original parsing commit
were made.
Thanks for Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36894
llvm-svn: 311946
This extends the current llvm-rc parser by ICON and HTML resources.
Moreover, some tests have been slightly rewritten.
Thanks for Nico Weber for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36891
llvm-svn: 311939
The current file layout algorithm in llvm-objcopy is simple but
difficult to reason about. It also makes it very complicated to support
nested segments and to support segments that have offsets that come
before a point after the program headers. To support these cases and
simplify one of the most critical parts llvm-objcopy I rewrote the
layout algorithm. Laying out segments first solves most of the issues
encountered by the previous algorithm.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36494
llvm-svn: 311825
This adds support for dumping a summary of module symbols
and CodeView debug chunks. This option prints a table for
each module of all of the symbols that occurred in the module
and the number of times it occurred and total byte size. Then
at the end it prints the totals for the entire file.
Additionally, this patch adds the -jmc (just my code) option,
which suppresses modules which are from external libraries or
linker imports, so that you can focus only on the object files
and libraries that originate from your own source code.
llvm-svn: 311338
Summary:
The New Pass Manager infrastructure was forgetting to keep around the optimization remark yaml file that the compiler might have been producing. This meant setting the option to '-' for stdout worked, but setting it to a filename didn't give file output (presumably it was deleted because compilation didn't explicitly keep it). This change just ensures that the file is kept if compilation succeeds.
So far I have updated one of the optimization remark output tests to add a version with the new pass manager. It is my intention for this patch to also include changes to all tests that use `-opt-remark-output=` but I wanted to get the code patch ready for review while I was making all those changes.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33951
Reviewers: anemet, chandlerc
Reviewed By: anemet, chandlerc
Subscribers: javed.absar, chandlerc, fhahn, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36906
llvm-svn: 311271
mt.exe performs a tree merge where certain element nodes are combined
into one. This introduces the possibility of xml namespaces conflicting
with each other. The original mt.exe has a hierarchy whereby certain
namespace names can override others, and nodes that would then end up in
ambigious namespaces have their namespaces explicitly defined. This
namespace handles this merging process.
llvm-svn: 311215
As for now, the parser supports a limited set of statements and
resources. This will be extended in the following patches.
Thanks to Nico Weber (thakis) for his original work in this area.
This patch was originally submitted as r311175 and got reverted
in r311177 because of the problems with compilation under gcc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36340
llvm-svn: 311184
As for now, the parser supports a limited set of statements and
resources. This will be extended in the following patches.
Thanks to Nico Weber (thakis) for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36340
llvm-svn: 311175
When dumping, we were treating the S_INLINESITESYM as referring
to a type record, when it actually refers to an id record. We
had this correct in TypeIndexDiscovery, so our merging algorithm
should be fine, but we had it wrong in the dumper, which means it
would appear to work most of the time, unless the index was out
of bounds in the type stream, when it would fail. Fixed this, and
audited a few other cases to make them match the behavior in
TypeIndexDiscovery.
Also, I've now observed a new symbol record with kind 0x1168 which
I have no clue what it is, so to avoid crashing we have to just
print "Unknown Symbol Kind".
llvm-svn: 311117
1) We weren't handling symbol types that weren't able to parse,
even if we knew what the leaf type was. This was triggering
when trying to dump /DEBUG:FASTLINK PDBs, where we expect a
certain symbol to show up, but we just don't know how to parse
it.
2) We lost the code for dumping record bytes, so this was added
back.
llvm-svn: 311116
Fix for PR32763
An assert that checks if a Ref was untracked fails during ThinLTO context cleanup. The issue is because lazy loading temporary nodes didn't properly track ValueAsMetadata nodes. This patch ensures that the temporary nodes are properly tracked when they're replaced with the value.
llvm-svn: 310967
Summary:
This patch adds the -path-equivalence option (example: llvm-cov show -path-equivalence=/origin/path,/local/path) which maps the source code path from one machine to another when using `llvm-cov show`. This is similar to the -filename-equivalence option, but doesn't require you to specify all the source files on the command line.
This allows you to generate the coverage data on one machine (e.g. in a CI system), and then use llvm-cov on another machine where you have the same code base on a different path.
Reviewers: vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36391
llvm-svn: 310827
Summary:
In Python 2, calling `dict.items()` returns an indexable `list`, whereas
on Python 3 it returns a set-like `dict_items` object, which cannot be
indexed. Explicitly onvert the `dict_items` object so that it can be
indexed when using Python 3.
In combination with D36622, D36623, and D36624, this change allows
`opt-viewer.py` to exit successfully when run with Python 3.4.
Test Plan:
Run `opt-viewer.py` using Python 3.4 and confirm it does not encounter a
runtime error when when indexing into `dict.items()`.
Reviewers: anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36630
llvm-svn: 310810
PDBs need to contain 1 module for each object file/compiland,
and a special one synthesized by the linker. This one contains
a symbol record for each output section in the executable with
its address information. This patch adds such symbols to the
linker module. Note that we also are supposed to add an
S_COFFGROUP symbol for what appears to be each input section that
contributes to each output section, but it's not entirely clear
how to generate these yet, so I'm leaving that for a separate
patch.
llvm-svn: 310754
Summary:
When using Python 3, `pygments.highlight()` returns a `bytes` object, not
a `str`, causing the call to `str.replace` on the following line to fail
with a runtime exception:
`TypeError: 'str' does not support the buffer interface`. Decode the
bytes into a string in order to fix the exception.
Test Plan:
Run `opt-viewer.py` with Python 3.4, and confirm no runtime error occurs
when calling `str.replace`.
Reviewers: anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36624
llvm-svn: 310741
Summary:
Replace a usage of a Python 2-specific `dict.iteritems()` with the
Python 3-compatible definition provided at the top of the same file.
Test Plan:
Run `opt-viewer.py` using Python 3 and confirm it no longer encounters a
runtime error when calling `dict.iteritems()`.
Reviewers: anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36623
llvm-svn: 310740
Summary:
In Python 2, `intern()` is a builtin function available to all programs.
In Python 3, it was moved into the `sys` module, available as
`sys.intern`. Import it such that, within `optrecord.py`, `intern()` is
available whether run using Python 2 or 3.
Test Plan:
Run `opt-viewer.py` using Python 3, confirm it no longer
encounters a runtime error when `intern()` is called.
Reviewers: anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36622
llvm-svn: 310739
This is both a potential security issue and a potential functionality
issue because we create temporary files from multiple threads. Use
the safe version of createTemporaryFile instead.
llvm-svn: 310636
This extends the shell of llvm-rc tool with the ability of tokenization
of the input files. Currently, ASCII and ASCII-compatible UTF-8 files
are supported.
Thanks to Nico Weber (thakis) for his original work in this area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35957
llvm-svn: 310621
Files which don't contain any functions are likely useless; don't
include them in the main table. Put the links at the bottom of the
page, in case someone wants to figure out coverage for code inside
a macro.
Not sure if this is the best solution, but it seems like an
improvement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36298
llvm-svn: 310518
In the refactor to merge the publics and globals stream, a bug
was introduced that wrote the wrong value for one of the fields
of the PublicsStreamHeader. This caused debugging in WinDbg
to break.
We had no way of dumping any of these fields, so in addition to
fixing the bug I've added dumping support for them along with a
test that verifies the correct value is written.
llvm-svn: 310439
The compiler outputs PROC32_ID symbols into the object files
for functions, and these symbols have an embedded type index
which, when copied to the PDB, refer to the IPI stream. However,
the symbols themselves are also converted into regular symbols
(e.g. S_GPROC32_ID -> S_GPROC32), and type indices in the regular
symbol records refer to the TPI stream. So this patch applies
two fixes to function records.
1. It converts ID symbols to the proper non-ID record type.
2. After remapping the type index from the object file's index
space to the PDB file/IPI stream's index space, it then
remaps that index to the TPI stream's index space by.
Besides functions, during the remapping process we were also
discarding symbol record types which we did not recognize.
In particular, we were discarding S_BPREL32 records, which is
what MSVC uses to describe local variables on the stack. So
this patch fixes that as well by copying them to the PDB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36426
llvm-svn: 310394
This adds a missing call to maybeUpdateMaxDwarfVersion when visitng a
clang module. Failing to do so will cause a failure when emitting
DWARF 4 forms into a CU that AsmPrinter believes to be DWARF 2.
rdar://problem/33666528
llvm-svn: 310392
Sometimes LLD will produce a PT_LOAD segment that only covers the
headers (and covers no sections). GNU objcopy does not output the
segment contents for these sections. In particular this is an issue in
building magenta because the final link step for the kernel would
produce just such a PT_LOAD segment. This change is to support this case
and to match what GNU objcopy does in this case.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36196
llvm-svn: 310149
This extends the native reader to enable llvm-pdbutil to list the enums in a
PDB and it includes a simple test. It does not yet list the values in the
enumerations, which requires an actual implementation of
NativeEnumSymbol::FindChildren.
To exercise this code, use a command like:
llvm-pdbutil pretty -native -enums foo.pdb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35738
llvm-svn: 310144
This change adds the "-O binary" flag which directs llvm-objcopy to
output the object file to the same format as GNU objcopy does when given
the flag "-O binary". This was done by splitting the Object class into
two subclasses ObjectELF and ObjectBianry which each output a different
format but relay on the same code to read in the Object in Object.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34480
llvm-svn: 310127
Image section headers are stored in the DBI stream, but we
had no way to dump them. This patch adds dumping support,
along with some tests that LLD actually dumps them correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36332
llvm-svn: 310107
Summary: When polly is linked into the tools because of the LLVM_POLLY_LINK_INTO_TOOLS option being set, we need to register its passes with the PassBuilder. Because polly is linked in, we can directly call its callback registration method, which registers the appropriate callbacks with the new PM's PassBuilder. This essentially follows exactly the way it worked with the legacy PM.
Reviewers: grosser, chandlerc, bollu
Reviewed By: grosser
Subscribers: pollydev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36273
llvm-svn: 310043
This change adds the "-O binary" flag which directs llvm-objcopy to
output the object file to the same format as GNU objcopy does when given
the flag "-O binary". This was done by splitting the Object class into
two subclasses ObjectELF and ObjectBianry which each output a different
format but relay on the same code to read in the Object in Object.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34480
llvm-svn: 310018
This patch makes a slight change to the way llvm-cov determines line
execution counts. If there are multiple line segments on a line, the
line count is the max count among the regions which start *and* end on
the line. This avoids an issue posed by deferred regions which start on
the same line as a terminated region, e.g:
if (false)
return; //< The line count should be 0, even though a new region
//< starts at the semi-colon.
foo();
Another change is that counts from line segments which don't correspond
to region entries are considered. This enables the first change, and
corrects an outstanding issue (see the showLineExecutionCounts.cpp test
change).
This is related to D35925.
Testing: check-profile, llvm-cov lit tests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36014
llvm-svn: 310012
Often something interesting (like a symbol) is in a particular
module, and you don't want to dump symbols from all other 300
modules to see the one you want. This adds a -modi option so that
we only dump the specified module.
llvm-svn: 310000
With this change, the GlobalISel library gets always built. In
particular, this is not possible to opt GlobalISel out of the build
using the LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL variable any more.
llvm-svn: 309990
Sometimes the normal module equivalence detection algorithm doesn't
quite work. For example, you might build the same program with
MSVC and clang-cl, outputting to different object files, exes, and
PDBs, then compare them. If the object files have different names
though, then they won't be treated as equivalent. This way we
can force specific module indices to be treated as equivalent.
llvm-svn: 309983
IMHO it is an antipattern to have a enum value that is Default.
At any given piece of code it is not clear if we have to handle
Default or if has already been mapped to a concrete value. In this
case in particular, only the target can do the mapping and it is nice
to make sure it is always done.
This deletes the two default enum values of CodeModel and uses an
explicit Optional<CodeModel> when it is possible that it is
unspecified.
llvm-svn: 309911
The CoverageMapping::getInstantiations() API retrieved all function
records corresponding to functions with more than one instantiation (e.g
template functions with multiple specializations). However, there was no
simple way to determine *which* function a given record was an
instantiation of. This was an oversight, since it's useful to aggregate
coverage information over all instantiations of a function.
llvm-cov works around this by building a mapping of source locations to
instantiation sets, but this duplicates logic that libCoverage already
has (see FunctionInstantiationSetCollector).
This change adds a new API, CoverageMapping::getInstantiationGroups(),
which returns a list of InstantiationGroups. A group contains records
for each instantiation of some particular function, and also provides
utilities to get the total execution count within the group, the source
location of the common definition, etc.
This lets removes some hacky logic in llvm-cov by reusing
FunctionInstantiationSetCollector and makes the CoverageMapping API
friendlier for other clients.
llvm-svn: 309904
Recently problems have been discovered in the way we write the FPM
(free page map). In order to fix this, we first need to establish
a baseline about what a correct FPM looks like using an MSVC
generated PDB, so that we can then make our own generated PDBs
match. And in order to do this, the dumper needs a mode where it
can dump an FPM so that we can write tests for it.
This patch adds a command to dump the FPM, as well as a test against
a known-good PDB.
llvm-svn: 309894
I was surprised to see the code model being passed to MC. After all,
it assembles code, it doesn't create it.
The one place it is used is in the expansion of .cfi directives to
handle .eh_frame being more that 2gb away from the code.
As far as I can tell, gnu assembler doesn't even have an option to
enable this. Compiling a c file with gcc -mcmodel=large produces a
regular looking .eh_frame. This is probably because in practice linker
parse and recreate .eh_frames.
In llvm this is used because the JIT can place the code and .eh_frame
very far apart. Ideally we would fix the jit and delete this
option. This is hard.
Apart from confusion another problem with the current interface is
that most callers pass CodeModel::Default, which is bad since MC has
no way to map it to the target default if it actually needed to.
This patch then replaces the argument with a boolean with a default
value. The vast majority of users don't ever need to look at it. In
fact, only CodeGen and llvm-mc use it and llvm-mc just to enable more
testing.
llvm-svn: 309884
This change adds the "-O binary" flag which directs llvm-objcopy to
output the object file to the same format as GNU objcopy does when given
the flag "-O binary". This was done by splitting the Object class into
two subclasses ObjectELF and ObjectBianry which each output a different
format but relay on the same code to read in the Object in Object.
Patch by Jake Ehrlich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34480
llvm-svn: 309768
The coverage tool needs to know which slice to look at when it's handed
a universal binary. Some projects need to look at aggregate coverage
reports for a variety of slices in different binaries: this patch adds
support for these kinds of projects to llvm-cov.
rdar://problem/33579007
llvm-svn: 309747