The %T lit expansion expands to a common directory shared between all the tests in the same directory, which is unexpected and unintuitive, and more importantly, it's been a source of subtle race conditions and flaky tests. In https://reviews.llvm.org/D35396, it was agreed that it would be best to simply ban %T and only keep %t, which is unique to each test. When a test needs a temporary directory, it can just create one using mkdir %t.
This patch removes %T in llvm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36495
llvm-svn: 310953
Followup to r309570, fixing it slightly differently (ranges_base and
addr_base should never be read from a DWO file - so there shouldn't be
any issue with 'overriding' the values - conditionalize the code and
assert that the values aren't being overriden).
llvm-svn: 309879
If you've archived the DWP file somewhere it's probably useful to be
able to just tell llvm-symbolizer where it is when you're symbolizing
stack traces from the binary.
This only provides a mechanism for specifying a single DWP file, good if
you're symbolizing a program with a single DWP file, but it's likely if
the program is dynamically linked that you might have a DWP for each
dynamic library - in which case this feature won't help (at least as
it's surfaced in llvm-symbolizer for now) - in theory it could be
extended to specify a collection of DWP files that could all be
consulted for split CU hash resolution.
llvm-svn: 309498
Summary: White spaces in file names are causing Phabricator/SVN to crash.
Reviewers: bkramer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35206
llvm-svn: 307550
This reverts commit da6318a92fba793e4f2447ec478b001392d57d43.
This is causing failures on some build bots due to what appears
to be some kind of lit ordering dependency.
llvm-svn: 306833
Presently lit leaks files in the tests' output directories.
Specifically, if a test creates output files, lit makes no
effort to remove them prior to the next test run. This is
problematic because it leads to false positives whenever a
test passes because stale files were present. In general
it is a source of flakiness that should be removed.
This patch addresses this by building the list of all test
directories that are part of the current run set, and then
deleting those directories and recreating them anew. This
gives each test a clean baseline to start from.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34732
llvm-svn: 306832
llvm-symbolizer would fail to symbolize addresses in unlinked object
files when handling .dwo file data because the addresses would not be
relocated in the same way as the ranges in the skeleton CU in the object
file.
Fix that so object files can be symbolized the same as executables.
llvm-svn: 303532
Rather than relying on the gmlt-like data emitted into the .o/executable
which only contains the simple name of any inlined functions, use the
.dwo file if present.
Test symbolication with/without a .dwo, and the old test that was
testing behavior when no gmlt-like data was present. (I haven't included
a test of non-gmlt-like data + no .dwo (that would be akin to
symbolication with no debug info) but we could add one for completeness)
The test was simplified a bit to be a little clearer (unoptimized, force
inline, using a function call as the inlined entity) and regenerated
with ToT clang. For the no-gmlt-like-data case, I modified Clang back to
its old behavior temporarily & the .dwo file is identical so it is
shared between the two executables.
llvm-svn: 267227
Summary: getSubroutineName is currently only used by llvm-symbolizer, thus add a binary test containing a cross-cu inlining example.
Reviewers: samsonov, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5394
llvm-svn: 218245
To reduce the size of -gmlt data, skip the subprograms without any
inlined subroutines. Since we've now got the ability to make these
determinations in the backend (funnily enough - we added the flag so we
wouldn't produce ranges under -gmlt, but with this change we use the
flag, but go back to producing ranges under -gmlt).
Instead, just produce CU ranges to inform the consumer which parts of
the code are described by this CU's line table. Tools could inspect the
line table directly to compute the range, but the CU ranges only seem to
be about 0.5% of object/executable size, so I'm not too worried about
teaching llvm-symbolizer that trick just yet - it's certainly a possible
piece of future work.
Update an llvm-symbolizer test just to demonstrate that this schema is
acceptable there (if it wasn't, the compiler-rt tests would catch this,
but good to have an in-llvm-tree test for llvm-symbolizer's behavior
here)
Building the clang binary with -gmlt with this patch reduces the total
size of object files by 5.1% (5.56% without ranges) without compression
and the executable by 4.37% (4.75% without ranges).
llvm-svn: 218129
Previous algorithm for constructing [Address ranges]->[Compile Units]
mapping was wrong. It somewhat relied on the assumption that address ranges
for different compile units may not overlap. It is not so.
For example, two compile units may contain the definition of the same
linkonce_odr function. These definitions will be merged at link-time,
resulting in equivalent .debug_ranges entries for both these units
Instead of sorting and merging original address ranges (from .debug_ranges
and .debug_aranges), implement a different approach: save endpoints
of all ranges, and then use a sweep-line approach to construct
the desired mapping. If we find that certain address maps to
several compilation units, we just pick any of them.
llvm-svn: 210860
Turns out that DW_AT_ranges_base attribute sets the offset for
DW_AT_ranges values specified in the .dwo file, but not for DW_AT_ranges specified
in the skeleton compile unit DIE in the main executable. This is extremely confusing,
and would hopefully be fixed in DWARF-5 when it's finalized. For now this
behavior makes sense, as otherwise Fission would break DWARF consumers who
doesn't know anything about DW_AT_ranges_base.
llvm-svn: 210809
Change --functions option in llvm-symbolizer tool to accept
values "none", "short" or "linkage". Update the tests and docs
accordingly.
llvm-svn: 209050
This is important for symbolizing executables with debug info in
unavailable .dwo files. Even if all DIE entries are missing, we can
still symbolize an address: function name can be fetched from symbol table,
and file/line info can be fetched from line table.
llvm-svn: 206665