Summary:
The debug link and build-id lookups are two independent ways one can
search for a separate symbol file. However, our implementation in
SymbolVendorELF was tying the two together and refusing to look up the
symbol file based on a build id if the file did not contain a debug
link.
This patch makes it possible to search for the symbol file with
just one of the two methods available. To demonstrate, I split the
build-id-case test into two, so that we test the search using both
methods.
Reviewers: jankratochvil, mgorny, clayborg, espindola, alexshap
Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, MaskRay, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65561
llvm-svn: 367994
There are multiple yaml2obj-* tests in llvm/test/Object
folder. This is not correct place to have them and my intention
was to move them out to test\tools\yaml2obj folder. I reviewed
them, made some changes, and my comments are below.
For all tests I:
Added comments when needed.
Moved them from llvm/test/Object to yaml2obj tests.
Another changes performed:
1) yaml2obj-invalid.yaml. It was a test for an invalid YAML input.
I just moved it.
2) yaml2obj-coff-multi-doc.test/yaml2obj-elf-multi-doc.test:
these were a tests for testing --docnum=x functionality,
one was for COFF and one for ELF. I merged them into one.
3) yaml2obj-elf-bits-endian.test:
I removed its 4 YAML inputs (merged into the main test).
4) yaml2obj-readobj.test:
This file has a long history. It was added to check the
"parsing of header charactestics" initially. Then was used to test
how yaml2obj writes the relocations. Then was upgraded to check how
yaml2obj handle "-o" option. I think it should be heavily splitted
and refactored in a separate patch. For now I leaved it as is, but restyled
to reduce the changes in a follow-ups.
5) yaml2obj-elf-alignment.yaml: its intention was to check we
can set sh-addralign field. I moved, renamed (to elf-sh-addralign.yaml)
and updated this test.
6) yaml2obj-elf-file-headers.yaml: I removed it.
It's intention was to check that
yaml2obj handles OS/ABI and ELF type (e.g Relocatable).
We are testing this already, for example in D64800. We might want
to add a better (more complete) test, but keeping the existent test
does not have much sense I think.
7) yaml2obj-elf-file-headers-with-e_flags.yaml: I would describe its intention
as "testing MIPS e_flags". It is far from being complete and tests only
a few flags. I leaved it alone for now.
8) yaml2obj-elf-rel.yaml: its intention is to check the MIPS32 relocations.
We have a version for MIPS64 here: test\Object\Mips\elf-mips64-rel.yaml
Seems them both are incomplete. I leaved them alone for now.
9) yaml2obj-elf-rel-noref.yaml: was introduced to check the support of arm32
R_ARM_V4BX relocatiion. I leaved it alone for now.
10) yaml2obj-elf-section-basic.yaml: it just checked that we are able to recognise
trivial fields like section 'Name', 'Type', 'Flags' and others. All of our yaml2obj
tests are heavily using it. I just removed this test.
11) yaml2obj-elf-section-invalid-size.yaml: its intention was to check the
"Section size must be greater than or equal to the content size" error.
I moved this test to `tools\yaml2obj\section-size-content.yaml'
12) yaml2obj-elf-symbol-basic.yaml: its intention seems was to support declarations
of the symbols in yaml2obj. I removed it. We use this in almost each test we already have.
13) yaml2obj-elf-symbol-LocalGlobalWeak.yaml: its intention was to check that we can
declare different symbol bindings. I moved it to tools\yaml2obj\elf-symbol-binding.yaml.
14) yaml2obj-coff-invalid-alignment.test: check that error is reported for a too large coff
section alignment. Moved it to tools\yaml2obj\coff-invalid-alignment.test
15) yaml2obj-elf-symbol-visibility.yaml: tests ELF symbols visibility. I improved it and
moved to tools\yaml2obj\elf-symbol-visibility.yaml and tools\obj2yaml\elf-symbol-visibility.yaml
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65652
llvm-svn: 367988
Add a missing semicolon after an assert. Remove the period from the
assert message while I'm here, because we don't usually have those.
llvm-svn: 367984
Summary:
lld r367537 changed the way the linker organizes sections and segments.
This exposed an lldb bug and caused some tests to fail.
In all of the failing tests the root cause was the same -- when we were
trying to resolve the last address in the line_table section, we failed
because it pointed past the end of the section.
This patch changes the line table address resolution code to back up the
address by one for end-of-sequence entries. This ensures the address
still points inside a section/module even if the line table sequence
ends at the very end of a section.
It also reverts the linker flags which were added to the failing tests
to restore previous behavior.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: mgorny, MaskRay, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65647
llvm-svn: 367983
There are times when we wish to explicitly control the C++ standard
library search paths used by the driver. For example, when we're
building against the Android NDK, we might want to use the NDK's C++
headers (which have a custom inline namespace) even if we have C++
headers installed next to the driver. We might also be building against
a non-standard directory layout and wanting to specify the C++ standard
library include directories explicitly.
We could accomplish this by passing -nostdinc++ and adding an explicit
-isystem for our custom search directories. However, users of our
toolchain may themselves want to use -nostdinc++ and a custom C++ search
path (libc++'s build does this, for example), and our added -isystem
won't respect the -nostdinc++, leading to multiple C++ header
directories on the search path, which causes build failures.
Add a new driver option -stdlib++-isystem to support this use case.
Passing this option suppresses adding the default C++ library include
paths in the driver, and it also respects -nostdinc++ to allow users to
still override the C++ library paths themselves.
It's a bit unfortunate that we end up with both -stdlib++-isystem and
-cxx-isystem, but their semantics differ significantly. -cxx-isystem is
unaffected by -nostdinc++ and is added to the end of the search path
(which is not appropriate for C++ standard library headers, since they
often #include_next into other system headers), while -stdlib++-isystem
respects -nostdinc++, is added to the beginning of the search path, and
suppresses the default C++ library include paths.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64089
llvm-svn: 367982
On a musl-based Linux distribution, stdalign.h stdarg.h stdbool.h stddef.h stdint.h stdnoreturn.h are expected to be provided by musl (/usr/include), instead of RESOURCE_DIR/include.
Reorder RESOURCE_DIR/include to fix the search order problem.
(Currently musl doesn't provide stdatomic.h. stdatomic.h is still found in RESOURCE_DIR/include.)
gcc on musl has a similar search order:
```
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-alpine-linux-musl/8.3.0/../../../../include/c++/8.3.0
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-alpine-linux-musl/8.3.0/../../../../include/c++/8.3.0/x86_64-alpine-linux-musl
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-alpine-linux-musl/8.3.0/../../../../include/c++/8.3.0/backward
/usr/local/include
/usr/include/fortify
/usr/include
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-alpine-linux-musl/8.3.0/include
```
This is different from a glibc-based distribution where RESOURCE_DIR/include is placed before SYSROOT/usr/include.
According to the maintainer of musl:
> musl does not support use/mixing of compiler-provided std headers with its headers, and intentionally has no mechanism for communicating with such headers as to which types have already been defined or still need to be defined. If the current include order, with clang's headers before the libc ones, works in some situations, it's only by accident.
Reviewed by: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65699
llvm-svn: 367981
Prior to this patch Unix style errno error reporting from the inotify layer was
used by DirectoryWatcher::create to simply return a nullptr on error. This
would generally be ok, except that in LLVM we have much more robust error
reporting through the facilities of llvm::Expected.
The other critical thing I stumbled across was that the unit tests for
DirectoryWatcher were not failing abruptly when inotify_init() was reporting an
error, but would continue with the testing and eventually hit a deadlock in a
pathological machine state (ie in the unit test, the return nullptr on ::create
was ignored).
Generally this pathological state never happens on any build bot, so it is
totally understandable that it was overlooked, but on a Linux desktop running
a dubious desktop environment (which I will not name) there is a chance that
said desktop environment could use up enough inotify instances to exceed the
user's limit. These are the conditions that led me to hit the deadlock I am
addressing in this patch with more robust error handling.
With the new llvm::Expected error handling when your system runs out of inotify
instances for your user, the unit test will be forced to handle the error or
crash and report the issue to the user instead of weirdly deadlocking on a
condition variable wait.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65704
llvm-svn: 367979
The implementation of the OpenCL builtin currently library uses 2
different hacks to get to the corresponding IR intrinsics from the
source. This will allow removal of those.
This is the set that is currently used (minus a few vector ones).
llvm-svn: 367973
This should not affect actual behavior, but should pessimize the threading less
by avoiding the situation where:
* mutex is still locked
* T1 notifies on condition variable
* T2 wakes to check mutex
* T2 sees mutex is still locked
* T2 waits
* T1 unlocks mutex
* T2 tries again, acquires mutex.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65708
llvm-svn: 367968
Added two more conversions to satisfy MSVC and moved the declaration of
MCPhysReg to MCRegister.h to enable that
This reverts r367932 (git commit eac86ec25f)
llvm-svn: 367965
Third landing attempt: Added "if (HAVE_LIBCXX)" to keep Green Dragon green.
Haven't found a better way to pass the libcxx include path for building
compiler-rt with libcxx; this seems to be missing only for xray.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65307
llvm-svn: 367962
Summary:
Similar to `Attributor::checkForAllCallSites`, we now provide such
functionality for instructions of a certain opcode through
`Attributor::checkForAllInstructions` and the convenient wrapper
`Attributor::checkForAllCallLikeInstructions`. This cleans up code,
avoids duplication, and simplifies the usage of liveness information.
Reviewers: sstefan1, uenoku
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65731
llvm-svn: 367961
Fixes e.g.
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-bootstrap-ubsan/builds/14273
We can't left shift here because left shifting of a negative number is UB.
The same doesn't apply to unsigned arithmetic, but switching to unsigned
doesn't appear to stop ubsan from complaining, so we need to mask out the
high bits.
llvm-svn: 367959
Before making a link to a reference it is required to check that the
reference has a path (eg. primitives won't have paths).
This was done by checking if the path was empty; that worked because
when generating paths the outdirectory was included, so if the path was
assigned it had that outdirectory at least.
The path generation was changed, it's now only the composite of the
namespaces without the outdirectory. So if the info is in the global
namespace the path would be empty and the old check wouldn't work as expected.
A new attribute has been added to the Reference struct that indicates if
the info's parent is the global namespace.
Paths generation now fails if the path is empty and if the info
is not in the global namespace.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64958
llvm-svn: 367958
Summary:
.. removing IsMeaninglessWithoutTypeResolution(). I'm fairly
confident this was introduced to support swift, where
static types [without dynamic counterpart] don't carry a lot
of value. Since then, the formatters and dynamic type resolution
has been rewritten, and we employ different solutions. This function
is unused here too, so let's get read of it.
<rdar://problem/36377967>
Reviewers: shafik, JDevlieghere, alex, compnerd, teemperor
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65782
llvm-svn: 367957
This was introduced when we were building a custom readline Python
module on Linux [1]. Now that the readline target doesn't exist
anymore, it's safe to remove this dependency.
This fixes https://llvm.org/PR25136
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D13268
llvm-svn: 367956
Summary:
Certain properties, e.g., an AttrKind, are not shared among all abstract
attributes. This patch extracts the functionality into a helper struct.
Reviewers: uenoku, sstefan1
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65712
llvm-svn: 367953
To remove boilerplate, mostly passing through values to the
AbstractAttriubute base class, we extract the state into an IRPosition
helper. There is no function change intended but the IRPosition struct
will provide more functionality down the line.
Reviewers: sstefan1, uenoku
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, jfb, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65711
llvm-svn: 367952
Summary:
The new scheme is similar to the pass manager and dyn_cast scheme where
we identify classes by the address of a static member. This is better
than the old scheme in which we had to "invent" new Attributor enums if
there was no corresponding one.
Reviewers: sstefan1, uenoku
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65710
llvm-svn: 367951
Summary:
Instead of storing the reference to the InformationCache we now pass it
whenever it might be needed.
Reviewers: sstefan1, uenoku
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65709
llvm-svn: 367950
A function is "no-return" if we never reach a return instruction, either
because there are none or the ones that exist are dead.
Test have been adjusted:
- either noreturn was added, or
- noreturn was avoided by modifying the code.
The new noreturn_{sync,async} test make sure we do handle invoke
instructions with a noreturn (and potentially nowunwind) callee
correctly, even in the presence of potential asynchronous exceptions.
llvm-svn: 367948
A buildbot got angry about this new test, with error messages like:
warn-nullchar-nullptr.c Line 16: use of undeclared identifier 'u'
It looks like this `u'c'` syntax was introduced in C11; I'm guessing
some bots may default to something before that. Let's see if explicitly
specifying the standard version makes it happy...
llvm-svn: 367947
Summary:
This simplifies the interface, as I'm trying to understand how
we can upstream swift support.
<rdar://problem/36377967>
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere, xiaobai, compnerd, friss
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65781
llvm-svn: 367946
This commit adds host CPU name and sub-target features to the
`JITTargetMachineBuilder` created by `JITTargetMachineBuilder::detectHost()`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65760
llvm-svn: 367944
r356153 changed default build option of static libcxx to no PIC. We now
need to explicitly specify CMAKE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE to get PIC
libcxx.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65773
llvm-svn: 367943
This has come up twice already (once in pr42763 and once in the commit thread), so give warning of a new way in which UB can result in unexpected program behavior.
llvm-svn: 367941
This patch adds a warning that diagnoses comparisons of pointers to
'\0'. This is often indicative of a bug (e.g. the user might've
forgotten to dereference the pointer).
Patch by Elaina Guan!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65595
llvm-svn: 367940