r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to
llvm::sort. Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the
required patches.
llvm-svn: 330061
While reading Codeview records which contain variable-length encoded integers,
such as LF_BCLASS, LF_ENUMERATE, LF_MEMBER, LF_VBCLASS or LF_IVBCLASS,
the record's size would be improperly calculated in cases where the value was
indeed of a variable length (>= LF_NUMERIC). This caused a bad alignement on
the next record, which would/might crash later on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45104
llvm-svn: 329659
Summary:
This patch add checks to verify that the information in the name index
entries is consistent with the debug_info section. Specifically, we
check that entries point to valid DIEs, and their names, tags, and
compile units match the information in the debug_info sections.
These checks are only run if the previous checks did not find any errors
in the name index headers. Attempting to proceed with the checks anyway
would likely produce a lot of spurious errors and the verification code
would need to be very careful to avoid crashing.
I also add a couple of more checks to the abbreviation-validation code
to verify that some attributes are always present (an index without a
DW_IDX_die_offset attribute is fairly useless).
The entry verification works only on indexes without any type units - I
haven't attempted to extend it to type units, as we don't even have a
DWARF v5-compatible type unit generator at the moment.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45323
llvm-svn: 329392
Summary:
The positions of the DwarfVersion and AddressSize arguments were
reversed, which caused parsing for dwarf opcodes which contained
address-size-dependent operands (such as DW_OP_addr). Amusingly enough,
none of the address-size asserts fired, as dwarf version was always 4,
which is a valid address size.
I ran into this when constructing weird inputs for the DWARF verifier. I
I add a test case as hand-written dwarf -- I am not sure how to trigger
this differently, as having a DW_OP_addr inside a location list is a
fairly non-standard thing to do.
Fixing this error exposed a bug in the debug_loc.dwo parser, which was
always being constructed with an address size of 0. I fix that as well
by following the pattern in the non-dwo parser of picking up the address
size from the first compile unit (which is technically not correct, but
probably good enough in practice).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45324
llvm-svn: 329381
Using this, you can use llvm-pdbutil to export the contents of a
stream to a binary file, then run explain on the binary file so
that it treats the offset as an offset into the stream instead
of an offset into a file. This makes it easy to compare the
contents of the same stream from two different files.
llvm-svn: 329207
The missing definitions are from cvconst.h shipped with DIA SDK.
Correct the url to MSDN for MemoryTypeEnum and set the underlying
type of PDB_StackFrameType and PDB_MemoryType to uint16_t.
llvm-svn: 329104
This command can dump the binary contents of a stream to a file.
This is useful when you want to do side-by-side comparisons of
a specific stream from two PDBs to examine the differences between
them. You can export both of them to a file, then open them up
side by side in a hex editor (for example), so as to eliminate any
differences that might arise from the contents being on different
blocks in the PDB.
In subsequent patches I plan to improve the "explain" subcommand
so that you can explain the contents of a binary file that isn't
necessarily a full PDB, but one of these dumped streams, by telling
the subcommand how to interpret the contents.
llvm-svn: 329002
Summary:
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before sorting.
This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined sorting
order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to llvm::sort.
Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the required patches.
Reviewers: echristo, zturner, samsonov
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45134
llvm-svn: 328935
This will show more detail when using `llvm-pdbutil explain` on an
offset in the DBI or PDB streams. Specifically, it will dig into
individual header fields and substreams to give a more precise
description of what the byte represents.
llvm-svn: 328878
There are two FPMs in an MSF file, the idea being that for
incremental updates you can write to the alternate one and then
atomically swap them on commit. LLVM defaulted to using FPM1
on the first commit, but this differs from Microsoft's behavior
which is to default to using FPM2 on the first commit. To
eliminate some byte-level file differences, this patch changes
LLVM's default to also be FPM2.
Additionally, LLVM was trying to be "smart" about marking FPM
pages allocated. In addition to marking every page belonging
to the alternate FPM as unallocated, LLVM also marked pages at
the end of the main FPM which were not needed as unallocated.
In order to match the behavior of Microsoft-generated PDBs, we
now always mark every FPM block as allocated, regardless of
whether it is in the main FPM or the alt FPM, and regardless of
whether or not it describes blocks which are actually in the file.
This has the side benefit of simplifying our code.
llvm-svn: 328812
We should align the value of the field, not the overall section offset.
This distinction matters if one of the debug_names contributions is not
of size which is a multiple of four. The dwarf producers may choose to
emit rounded contributions, but they are not required to do so. In the
latter case, without this patch we would corrupt the parsing state, as
we would adjust the offset even if subsequent contributions contained
correctly rounded augmentation strings.
llvm-svn: 328796
Before this patch we were parsing the attributes as section offsets, as
that is what apple_names is doing. However, this is not correct as DWARF
v5 specifies that this attribute should use the Reference form class.
This also updates all the testcases (except the ones that deliberately
pass a different form) to use the correct form class.
llvm-svn: 328773
Before this change, using dumpProperties() with PDBSymbolData
would look like this:
get_locationType: 3
1
After this change:
get_locationType: 3
get_value: 1
llvm-svn: 328590
This was reverted several times due to what ultimately turned out
to be incompatibilities in our serialized hash table format.
Several changes went in prior to this to fix those issues since
they were more fundamental and independent of supporting injected
sources, so now that those are fixed this change should hopefully
pass.
llvm-svn: 328363
When investigating bugs in PDB generation, the first step is
often to do the same link with link.exe and then compare PDBs.
But comparing PDBs is hard because two completely different byte
sequences can both be correct, so it hampers the investigation when
you also have to spend time figuring out not just which bytes are
different, but also if the difference is meaningful.
This patch fixes a couple of cases related to string table emission,
hash table emission, and the order in which we emit strings that
makes more of our bytes the same as the bytes generated by MS PDBs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44810
llvm-svn: 328348
NFC, this just renames some methods to better express what they
do, and also adds a few helper methods to add some symmetry to the
API in a few places (for example there was a getStringFromId but not
a getIdFromString method in the string table).
llvm-svn: 328221
Summary:
This commit adds checks of the abbreviation table in a DWARF v5 Name
Index. The most interesting/useful check is the one which checks that
each index attributes is encoded using the correct form class, but it
also checks for the more obvious errors like unknown
forms/tags/attributes and duplicated attributes.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44736
llvm-svn: 328202
To resolve symbol context at a particular address, we need to
determine the compiland for the address. We are able to determine
the parent compiland of PDBSymbolFunc, PDBSymbolTypeUDT,
PDBSymbolTypeEnum symbols indirectly through line information.
However no such information is availabile for PDBSymbolData,
i.e. variables.
The Section Contribution table from PDBs has information about
each compiland's contribution to sections by address. For example,
a piece of a contribution looks like,
VA RelativeVA Sect No. Offset Length Compiland
14000087B0 000087B0 0001 000077B0 000000BB exe_main.obj
So given an address, it's possible to determine its compiland with
this information.
llvm-svn: 328178
The hash table is a list of buckets, and the *value* stored in
the bucket cannot be 0 since that is reserved. However, the code
here was incorrectly skipping over the 0'th bucket entirely.
The 0'th bucket is perfectly fine, just none of these buckets
can contain the value 0.
As a result, whenever there was a string where hash(S) % Size
was equal to 0, we would write the value in the next bucket
instead. We never caught this in our tests due to *another*
bug, which is that we would iterate the entire list of buckets
looking for the value, only using the hash value as a starting
point. However, the real algorithm stops when it finds 0 in
a bucket since it takes that to mean "the item is not in the
hash table".
The unit test is updated to carefully construct a set of hash
values that will cause one item to hash to 0 mod bucket count,
and the reader is also updated to return an error indicating that
the item is not found when it encounters a 0 bucket.
llvm-svn: 328162
This is mostly just plumbing to get a DWARFDataExtractor where we
compute abbr_offset so we can use getRelocatedValue.
This is part of PR36793.
llvm-svn: 328154
Summary:
We have had at least three pieces of code (in DWARFAbbreviationDeclaration,
DWARFAcceleratorTable and DWARFDie) that have hand-rolled support for
dumping unknown dwarf enum values. While not terrible, they are a bit
distracting and enable small differences to creep in (Unknown_ffff vs.
Unknown_0xffff). I ended up needing to add a fourth place
(DWARFVerifier), so it seems it would be a good time to centralize.
This patch creates an alternative to the XXXString dumping functions in
the BinaryFormat library, which formats an unknown value as
DW_TYPE_unknown_1234, instead of just an empty string. It is based on
the formatv function, as that allows us to avoid materializing the
string for unknown values (and because this way I don't have to invent a
name for the new functions :P).
In this patch I add formatters for dwarf attributes, forms, tags, and
index attributes as these are the ones in use currently, but adding
other enums is straight-forward.
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44570
llvm-svn: 328090
This is still failing on a different bot this time due to some
issue related to hashing absolute paths. Reverting until I can
figure it out.
llvm-svn: 328014
The issue causing this to fail in certain configurations
should be fixed.
It was due to the fact that DIA apparently expects there to be
a null string at ID 1 in the string table. I'm not sure why this
is important but it seems to make a difference, so set it.
llvm-svn: 328002
Summary:
Redefine PDBSymbolCompiland::getSourceFileName() to return the filename (w/o directory) of the source file that is used to compile the compiland. This is because the result returned previously is ambiguous. It could be the filename, relative path or full path of the source file.
Move the implementation of SymbolFilePDB::GetSourceFileNameForPDBCompiland() into a new method PDBSymbolCompiland::getSourceFileFullPath().
Reviewers: zturner, rnk, llvm-commits
Reviewed By: zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44458
llvm-svn: 327910
Summary: This commit adds two methods to the PDBSymboFunc class used in parsing symbols. getLineNumbers() is used to determine a Function symbol's declaration and getCompilandId() is used to initialize the SymbolContext field sc.comp_unit.
Reviewers: zturner, rnk, llvm-commits
Reviewed By: zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44457
llvm-svn: 327909
Natvis is a debug language supported by Visual Studio for
specifying custom visualizers. The /NATVIS option is an
undocumented link.exe flag which will take a .natvis file
and "inject" it into the PDB. This way, you can ship the
debug visualizers for a program along with the PDB, which
is very useful for postmortem debugging.
This is implemented by adding a new "named stream" to the
PDB with a special name of /src/files/<natvis file name>
and simply copying the contents of the xml into this file.
Additionally, we need to emit a single stream named
/src/headerblock which contains a hash table of embedded
files to records describing them.
This patch adds this functionality, including the /NATVIS
option to lld-link.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44328
llvm-svn: 327895
Summary:
This patch adds more checks to the .debug_names validator. Specifically,
they check for:
- buckets claiming to be non-empty but pointing to mismatched hashes
(most consumers would interpret this as an empty bucket, but it
questionable whether the generator meant that)
- hashes that are not reachable from any bucket
- names with incorrect hashes
Together, these checks ensure that any name in the index can be reached
through the hash table using the regular lookup algorithm. We also warn
if we encounter a name index without a hash table.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44433
llvm-svn: 327699
There was some code that tried to calculate the number of 4-byte
words required to hold N bits, but it was instead computing the
number of bytes required to hold N bits. This was leading to
extraneous data being output into the hash table, which would
cause certain operations in DIA (the Microsoft PDB reader) to
fail.
llvm-svn: 327675
It previously only worked when the key and value types were
both 4 byte integers. We now have a use case for a non trivial
value type, so we need to extend it to support arbitrary value
types, which means templatizing it.
llvm-svn: 327647
Summary:
Some PDB symbols do not have a valid VA or RVA but have Addr by Section and Offset. For example, a variable in thread-local storage has the following properties:
get_addressOffset: 0
get_addressSection: 5
get_lexicalParentId: 2
get_name: g_tls
get_symIndexId: 12
get_typeId: 4
get_dataKind: 6
get_symTag: 7
get_locationType: 2
This change provides a new method to locate line numbers by Section and Offset from those symbols.
Reviewers: zturner, rnk, llvm-commits
Subscribers: asmith, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44407
llvm-svn: 327601
Summary:
This patch replaces the two switches which are deducing the size of
various forms with a single implementation. I have put the new
implementation into BinaryFormat, to avoid introducing dependencies
between the two independent libraries (DebugInfo and CodeGen) that need
this functionality.
Reviewers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44418
llvm-svn: 327486
Make sure that DWARF line information generated by Windows can be properly read by Posix OS and vice versa.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44290
llvm-svn: 327430
Injected sources are basically a way to add actual source file content
to your PDB. Presumably you could use this for shipping your source code
with your debug information, but in practice I can only find this being
used for embedding natvis files inside of PDBs.
In order to effectively test LLVM's natvis file injection, we need a way
to dump the injected sources of a PDB in a way that is authoritative
(i.e. based on Microsoft's understanding of the PDB format, and not
LLVM's). To this end, I've added support for dumping injected sources
via DIA. I made a PDB file that used the /natvis option to generate a
test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44405
llvm-svn: 327428
Summary:
Even though the getDIEOffset offset function was common for the two
accelerator table implementations, it was doing two different things:
for the Apple tables, it was returning the die offset relative to the
start of the section, whereas for DWARF v5 tables, it was relative to
the start of the CU.
I resolve this by renaming the function to getDIESectionOffset to make
it obvious what the function returns, and change the DWARF
implementation to return the section offset. I also keep the CU-relative
accessor, but only in the DWARF implementation (there is no way to get
this information for the Apple tables). This was not caught by existing
tests because the hand-written inputs also erroneously used section
offsets instead of CU-relative ones.
While looking at this, I noticed that the Apple implementation was not
fully correct either -- the header contains a DIEOffsetBase field, which
should be added to offsets encoded with the DW_FORM_ref*** family, but
this was not being used. This went unnoticed because all current writers
set this field to zero anyway. I fix this as well and add a hand-written
test which demonstrates the issue.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44202
llvm-svn: 327116
Move the DWARF syntax highlighting into support. This has several
advantages, most notably that this makes the WithColor RAII wrapper
available outside libDebugInfo. Furthermore, several projects all have
their own code for handling colored output. This provides a place to
centralize it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44215
llvm-svn: 327108
Adding verbose dumping to the recent implementation of dumping of v5 range list entries.
We're capturing the entries as is as they come in during extraction, including their file offset,
so we can dump them in more detail.
The offset table entries which are table-relative are shown as is (as in non-verbose mode)
and with the actual file offset they map to.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, jdevlieghere, jhenderson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43366
llvm-svn: 327059
Summary:
This patch adds basic .debug_names verification capabilities to the
DWARF verifier. Right now, it checks that the headers and abbreviation
tables of the individual name indexes can be parsed correctly, it
verifies the buckets table and the cross-checks the CU lists for
consistency. I intend to add further checks in follow-up patches.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Subscribers: vleschuk, echristo, clayborg, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44211
llvm-svn: 327011
Whilst working on improvements to the error handling of the debug line
parsing code, I noticed that if an invalid offset were to be specified
in a call to getOrParseLineTable(), an entry in the LineTableMap would
still be created, even if the offset was not within the section range.
The immediate parsing attempt afterwards would fail (it would end up
getting a version of 0), and thereafter, any subsequent calls to
getOrParseLineTable or getLineTable would return the default-
constructed, invalid line table. In reality, we shouldn't even attempt
to parse this table, and we should always return a nullptr from these
two functions for this situation.
I have tested this via a unit test, which required some new framework
for unit testing debug line. My plan is to add quite a few more unit
tests for the new error reporting mechanism that will follow shortly,
hence the reason why the supporting code for the tests are written the
way they are - I intend to extend the DwarfGenerator class to support
generating debug line. At that point, I'll make sure that there are a
few positive test cases for this and the parsing code too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44200
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl
llvm-svn: 326995
Summary:
Original change was D43313 (r326932) and reverted by r326953 because it
broke an LLD test and a windows build. The LLD test was already fixed in
lld commit r326944 (thanks maskray). This is the original change with
the windows build fixed.
llvm-svn: 326970
Currently on Windows (_MSC_VER) LLVMSymbolizer supports only Microsoft mangling.
This fix just explicitly uses itaniumDemangle when mangled name starts with _Z.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44192
llvm-svn: 326959
This patch enhances DWARFDebugFrame with the capability of parsing and
printing DWARF expressions in CFI instructions. It also makes FDEs and
CIEs accessible to lib users, so they can process them in client tools
that rely on LLVM. To make it self-contained with a test case, it
teaches llvm-readobj to be able to dump EH frames and checks they are
correct in a unit test. The llvm-readobj code is Maksim Panchenko's work
(maksfb).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, espindola
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43313
llvm-svn: 326932
Instead of only printing the CU-relative offset in non-verbose mode, it
makes more sense to only printed the resolved address. In verbose mode
we still print both.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44148
rdar://33525475
llvm-svn: 326903
Summary: This helps to determine the line number for a PDB type with definition
Reviewers: zturner, llvm-commits, rnk
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: rengolin, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44119
llvm-svn: 326857
Summary:
The symbolizer was checking for .debug as a subdirectory of the
binary file itself, not of the directory containing the binary. This led to
a failure to find split debug info when it was contained in a .debug directory.
Reviewers: rnk, glider, zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44025
llvm-svn: 326630
For now this is NFC, but this small refactor opens the door to
letting us embed a hash of the PDB in the build id field of the
PDB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43913
llvm-svn: 326453
Qualifiers on a pointer or reference type may apply to either the
pointee or the pointer itself. Consider 'const char *' and 'char *
const'. In the first example, the pointee data may not be modified
without casts, and in the second example, the pointer may not be updated
to point to new data.
In the general case, qualifiers are applied to types with LF_MODIFIER
records, which support the usual const and volatile qualifiers as well
as the __unaligned extension qualifier.
However, LF_POINTER records, which are used for pointers, references,
and member pointers, have flags for qualifiers applying to the
*pointer*. In fact, this is the only way to represent the restrict
qualifier, which can only apply to pointers, and cannot qualify regular
data types.
This patch causes LLVM to correctly fold 'const' and 'volatile' pointer
qualifiers into the pointer record, as well as adding support for
'__restrict' qualifiers in the same place.
Based on a patch from Aaron Smith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43060
llvm-svn: 326260
Summary:
This patch implements the name lookup functionality of the .debug_names
accelerator table and hooks it up to "llvm-dwarfdump -find". To make the
interface of the two kinds of accelerator tables more consistent, I've
created an abstract "DWARFAcceleratorTable::Entry" class, which provides
a consistent interface to access the common functionality of the table
entries (such as getting the die offset, die tag, etc.). I've also
modified the apple table to vend entries conforming to this interface.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Subscribers: vleschuk, clayborg, echristo, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43067
llvm-svn: 326003
In DWARF v5 the Line Number Program Header is extensible, allowing values with
new content types. In this extension a content type is added,
DW_LNCT_LLVM_source, which contains the embedded source code of the file.
Add new optional attribute for !DIFile IR metadata called source which contains
source text. Use this to output the source to the DWARF line table of code
objects. Analogously extend METADATA_FILE in Bitcode and .file directive in ASM
to support optional source.
Teach llvm-dwarfdump and llvm-objdump about the new values. Update the output
format of llvm-dwarfdump to make room for the new attribute on file_names
entries, and support embedded sources for the -source option in llvm-objdump.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42765
llvm-svn: 325970
Verifying any DWARF file that is optimized and contains at least one tag
with a DW_AT_location with a location list offset as a
DW_AT_form_dataXXX results in dwarfdump spuriously claiming that the
location list is invalid.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40199
llvm-svn: 325430
This was originally reported as a bug with the symptom being "cvdump
crashes when printing an LLD-linked PDB that has an S_FILESTATIC record
in it". After some additional investigation, I determined that this was
a symptom of a larger problem, and in fact the real problem was in the
way we emitted the global PDB string table. As evidence of this, you can
take any lld-generated PDB, run cvdump -stringtable on it, and it would
return no results.
My hypothesis was that cvdump could not *find* the string table to begin
with. Normally it would do this by looking in the "named stream map",
finding the string /names, and using its value as the stream index. If
this lookup fails, then cvdump would fail to load the string table.
To test this hypothesis, I looked at the name stream map generated by a
link.exe PDB, and I emitted exactly those bytes into an LLD-generated
PDB. Suddenly, cvdump could read our string table!
This code has always been hacky and we knew there was something we
didn't understand. After all, there were some comments to the effect of
"we have to emit strings in a specific order, otherwise things don't
work". The key to fixing this was finally understanding this.
The way it works is that it makes use of a generic serializable hash map
that maps integers to other integers. In this case, the "key" is the
offset into a buffer, and the value is the stream number. If you index
into the buffer at the offset specified by a given key, you find the
name. The underlying cause of all these problems is that we were using
the identity function for the hash. i.e. if a string's offset in the
buffer was 12, the hash value was 12. Instead, we need to hash the
string *at that offset*. There is an additional catch, in that we have
to compute the hash as a uint32 and then truncate it to uint16.
Making this work is a little bit annoying, because we use the same hash
table in other places as well, and normally just using the identity
function for the hash function is actually what's desired. I'm not
totally happy with the template goo I came up with, but it works in any
case.
The reason we never found this bug through our own testing is because we
were building a /parallel/ hash table (in the form of an
llvm::StringMap<>) and doing all of our lookups and "real" hash table
work against that. I deleted all of that code and now everything goes
through the real hash table. Then, to test it, I added a unit test which
adds 7 strings and queries the associated values. I test every possible
insertion order permutation of these 7 strings, to verify that it really
does work as expected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43326
llvm-svn: 325386
Seeing some inlining missing in internal uses of symbolizer. I'll work
on a reproduction, tests, improvements & recommit as soon as possible.
(Chandler would like it to be known that this improvement did make
check-llvm 4x faster... - so there's certainly some fairly good
motivation to push on fixing/figuring this out & getting it back in)
This reverts commit r321345.
llvm-svn: 324981
Emitting the correct (root of compilation) file at index 0 will be
posted for review later; I wanted to get this minor change out of the
way first.
llvm-svn: 324669
The major visible difference here is that in line-table dumps,
directory and file names are wrapped in double-quotes; previously,
directory names got single quotes and file names were not quoted at
all.
The improvement in this patch is that when a DWARF v5 line table
header has indirect strings, in a verbose dump these will all have
their section[offset] printed as well as the name itself. This
matches the format used for dumping strings in the .debug_info
section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42802
llvm-svn: 324270
This change adds support to llvm-dwarfdump for dumping DWARF5
.debug_rnglists sections in regular ELF files.
It is not complete, in that several DW_RLE_* encodings are currently
not supported, but does dump the headert and the basic ranges for
DW_RLE_start_length and DW_RLE_start_end encodings.
Obvious next steps are to add verbose dumping that dumps the raw
encodings, rather than the interpreted contents, to add -verify support
of the section (e.g. to show that the correct number of offsets are
specified), add dumping of .debug_rnglists.dwo, and to add support for
other encodings.
Reviewed by: dblaikie, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42481
llvm-svn: 324077
Based on a profile, a couple of hot spots were identified in the
main type merging loop. The code was simplified, a few loops
were re-arranged, and some outlined functions were inlined. This
speeds up type merging by a decent amount, shaving around 3-4 seconds
off of a 40 second link in my test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42559
llvm-svn: 323790
r323476 added support for DW_FORM_line_strp, and incorrectly made that
depend on having a DWARFUnit available. We shouldn't be tracking
.debug_line_str in DWARFUnit after all. After this patch, I can do an
NFC follow up and undo a bunch of the "plumbing" part of r323476.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42609
llvm-svn: 323691
The test was failing because of an incorrect sizeof check in the name
index parsing code. This code was meant to check that we have enough
input to parse the fixed-size part of the dwarf header, which it did by
comparing the input to sizeof(Header). Originally struct Header only
contained the fixed-size part, but during review, we've moved additional
members into it, which rendered the sizeof check invalid.
I resolve this by moving the fixed-size part to a separate struct and
updating the sizeof-expression to use that.
llvm-svn: 323648
The call to ScopedPrinter::printNumber with size_t argument was
ambiguous (I think) on 32-bit builds. Explicitly cast to a 64-bit int to
avoid this.
llvm-svn: 323642
Summary:
This modifies the dwarfdump output to align it with the new .debug_names
dump. It also renames two header fields to match similar fields in the
dwarf5 header.
A couple of tests needed to be updated to match new output. The changes
were fairly straight-forward, although not really automatable.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42415
llvm-svn: 323641
Summary:
This commit renames DWARFAcceleratorTable to AppleAcceleratorTable to free up
the first name as an interface for the different accelerator tables.
Then I add a DWARFDebugNames class for the dwarf5 table.
Presently, the only common functionality of the two classes is the dump()
method, because this is the only method that was necessary to implement
dwarfdump -debug-names; and because the rest of the
AppleAcceleratorTable interface does not directly transfer to the dwarf5
tables (the main reason for that is that the present interface assumes
the tables are homogeneous, but the dwarf5 tables can have different
keys associated with each entry).
I expect to make the common interface richer as I add more functionality
to the new class (and invent a way to represent it in generic way).
In terms of sharing the implementation, I found the format of the two
tables sufficiently different to frustrate any attempts to have common
parsing or dumping code, so presently the implementations share just low
level code for formatting dwarf constants.
Reviewers: vleschuk, JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl, probinson, echristo, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42297
llvm-svn: 323638
This patch moves the DJB hash to support. This is consistent with other
hashing algorithms living there. The hash is used by the DWARF
accelerator tables. We're doing this now because the hashing function is
needed by dsymutil and we don't want to link against libBinaryFormat.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42594
llvm-svn: 323616
Move standard forms from a switch statement to the table of forms;
fill in all the missing ones defined in DWARF v5. I'm guessing at
classifications in a couple of cases where v5 forms aren't actually
supported yet, but whoever adds support for the forms can fix the
classifications as needed.
llvm-svn: 323481
This form is like DW_FORM_strp, but points to .debug_line_str instead
of .debug_str as the string section. It's intended to be used from
the line-table header, and allows string-pooling of directory and
filenames across compilation units.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42553
llvm-svn: 323476
This frees up the first name to be used as an base class for the
apple table and the dwarf5 .debug_names accel table. The rename was
split off from D42297 (adding of debug_names support), which is still
under review.
llvm-svn: 323113
The compilation directory has always been #0, but as of DWARF v5 it is
explicitly listed in the line-table section instead of implicitly
being a reference to the compile_unit DIE's DW_AT_comp_dir attribute.
This means the dumper should number the dumped array starting with 0
or 1 depending on the DWARF version of the line table.
References in the generated DWARF are correct, it's just the dumper
that was wrong. Also some assembler-coded tests were similarly
confused about directory numbers.
llvm-svn: 322884
There's some abstraction overhead in the underlying
mechanisms that were being used, and it was leading to an
abundance of small but not-free copies being made. This
showed up on a profile. Eliminating this and going back to
a low-level byte-based implementation speeds up lld with
/DEBUG between 10 and 15%.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42148
llvm-svn: 322871
Summary:
- Fix a bug in PrettyBuiltinDumper that returns "void" as the name for
an unspecified builtin type. Since the unspecified param of a variadic
function is considered a builtin of unspecified type in PDBs, we set
"..." for its name.
- Provide a method to determine if a PDBSymbolFunc is variadic in
PrettyFunctionDumper since PDBSymbolFunc::getArgument() doesn't return the
last unspecified-type param.
- Add a pretty-func-dumper.test to test pretty dumping of variadic
functions.
Reviewers: zturner, llvm-commits
Reviewed By: zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41801
llvm-svn: 322608
We have some code to try to determine how many pieces an MSF
Free Page Map is split into, and this code had an off by one
error which would cause the calculation to be incorrect when
there were exactly 4096*k + 1 blocks in an MSF file.
Original investigation and patch outline by Colden Cullen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41742
llvm-svn: 321880
inlined subroutines for a given address.
This is essentially the hot path of llvm-symbolizer when extracting
inlined frames during symbolization. Previously, we would read every
subprogram and every inlined subroutine, building a std::map across the
entire PC space to the best DIE, and then do only a handful of queries
as we symbolized a backtrace. A huge fraction of the time was spent
building the map itself.
This patch changes it two a two-level system. First, we just build a map
from PC-interval to DWARF subprograms. These are required to be disjoint
and so constructing this is pretty easy. Second, we build a map *just*
for the inlined subroutines within the subprogram containing the query
address. This allows us to look at far fewer DIEs and build a *much*
smaller set of cached maps in the llvm-symbolizer case where only a few
address get symbolized during the entire run.
It also builds both interval maps in a very different way. It constructs
a single flat vector of pairs that maps from offset -> index. The
indices point into collections of DIE objects, but can also be
"tombstones" (-1) to mark gaps. In the case of subprograms, this mostly
just simplifies the data structure a bit. For inlined subroutines,
because we carefully split them as we build the map, we end up in many
cases having no holes and not having to store both start and stop
offsets.
Finally, the PC ranges for the inlined subroutines are compressed into
32-bits by making them relative to the base PC of the outer subprogram.
This means that if you have a single function body with over 2gb of
executable code in it, we will stop mapping address past the first 2gb
of that function into inlined subroutines and just give you the
subprogram. This doesn't seem like a problem. ;]
All of this combines to make llvm-symbolizer *well* over 2x faster for
symbolizing backtraces out of LLVM's unittests. Death-test heavy unit
tests are running >2x faster. I'm still going to look at completely
disabling symbolization there, but figured while I had a good benchmark
we should make symbolization a bit better.
Sadly, the logic to build the flat interval map for the inlined
subroutines is fairly complex. I'm not super happy about this and
welcome any simplifying suggestions.
Huge thanks to Dave Blaikie who helped walk me through what the various
things I needed to do in DWARF to make this work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40987
llvm-svn: 321345
Reorganizes the DWARF consumer to derive the string offsets table
contribution's format from the contribution header instead of
(incorrectly) from the unit's format.
Reviewers: JDevliegehere, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41146
llvm-svn: 321295
Adds missing support for DW_FORM_data16.
Update of r320852/r320886, fixing the unittest again, this time use a
raw char string for the test data.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41090
llvm-svn: 321011
Adds missing support for DW_FORM_data16.
Update of r320852, fixing the unittest to use a hand-coded struct
instead of std::array to guarantee data layout.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41090
llvm-svn: 320886
This adds the /DEBUG:GHASH option to LLD which will look for
the existence of .debug$H sections in linker inputs and use them
to accelerate type merging. The clang-cl side has already been
added, so this completes the work necessary to begin experimenting
with this feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40980
llvm-svn: 320719
Currently this is an LLVM extension to the COFF spec which is
experimental and intended to speed up linking. For now it is
behind a hidden cl::opt flag, but in the future we can move it
to a "real" cc1 flag and have the driver pass it through whenever
it is appropriate.
The patch to actually make use of this section in lld will come
in a followup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40917
llvm-svn: 320649
This fixes a bug where the verifier was complaining about empty
accelerator tables. When the table is empty, its size is not a valid
offset as it points after the end of the section.
This patch also makes the extractor return llvm:Error instead of bool
for better error reporting in the verifier.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41063
rdar://35932007
llvm-svn: 320399
Previously, when linking against libcmt from the MSVC runtime,
lld-link /verbose would show "Ignoring unknown symbol record
with kind 0x1006". It turns out this was because
TypeIndexDiscovery did not handle S_REGISTER records, so these
records were not getting properly remapped.
Patch by: Alexnadre Ganea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40919
llvm-svn: 320108
Currently nothing uses this, but this at least gets the core
algorithm in, and adds some test to demonstrate correctness.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40736
llvm-svn: 319854
This was storing the hash alongside the key so that the hash
doesn't need to be re-computed every time, but in doing so it
was allocating a structure to keep the key size small in the
DenseMap. This is a noble goal, but it also leads to a pointer
indirection on every probe, and this cost of this pointer
indirection ends up being higher than the cost of having a
slightly larger entry in the hash table. Removing this not only
simplifies the code, but yields a small but noticeable
performance improvement in the type merging algorithm.
llvm-svn: 319493
This class had some code that would automatically remap type
indices before hashing and serializing. The only caller of
this method was the TypeStreamMerger anyway, and the method
doesn't make general sense, and prevents making certain future
improvements to the class. So, factoring this up one level
into the TypeStreamMerger where it belongs.
llvm-svn: 319377
A couple of places in LLD were passing references to
TypeTableCollections around, which makes it hard to change the
implementation at runtime. However, these cases only needed to
iterate over the types in the collection, and TypeCollection
already provides a handy abstract interface for this purpose.
By implementing this interface, we can get rid of the need to
pass TypeTableBuilder references around, which should allow us
to swap the implementation at runtime in subsequent patches.
llvm-svn: 319345
The motivation behind this patch is that future directions require us to
be able to compute the hash value of records independently of actually
using them for de-duplication.
The current structure of TypeSerializer / TypeTableBuilder being a
single entry point that takes an unserialized type record, and then
hashes and de-duplicates it is not flexible enough to allow this.
At the same time, the existing TypeSerializer is already extremely
complex for this very reason -- it tries to be too many things. In
addition to serializing, hashing, and de-duplicating, ti also supports
splitting up field list records and adding continuations. All of this
functionality crammed into this one class makes it very complicated to
work with and hard to maintain.
To solve all of these problems, I've re-written everything from scratch
and split the functionality into separate pieces that can easily be
reused. The end result is that one class TypeSerializer is turned into 3
new classes SimpleTypeSerializer, ContinuationRecordBuilder, and
TypeTableBuilder, each of which in isolation is simple and
straightforward.
A quick summary of these new classes and their responsibilities are:
- SimpleTypeSerializer : Turns a non-FieldList leaf type into a series of
bytes. Does not do any hashing. Every time you call it, it will
re-serialize and return bytes again. The same instance can be re-used
over and over to avoid re-allocations, and in exchange for this
optimization the bytes returned by the serializer only live until the
caller attempts to serialize a new record.
- ContinuationRecordBuilder : Turns a FieldList-like record into a series
of fragments. Does not do any hashing. Like SimpleTypeSerializer,
returns references to privately owned bytes, so the storage is
invalidated as soon as the caller tries to re-use the instance. Works
equally well for LF_FIELDLIST as it does for LF_METHODLIST, solving a
long-standing theoretical limitation of the previous implementation.
- TypeTableBuilder : Accepts sequences of bytes that the user has already
serialized, and inserts them by de-duplicating with a hash table. For
the sake of convenience and efficiency, this class internally stores a
SimpleTypeSerializer so that it can accept unserialized records. The
same is not true of ContinuationRecordBuilder. The user is required to
create their own instance of ContinuationRecordBuilder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40518
llvm-svn: 319198
The previous implementation would only look 1 DW_AT_specification or DW_AT_abstract_origin deep. This means DWARFDie::getName() would fail in certain cases. I ran into such a case while creating a tool that used the LLVM DWARF parser to generate a symbolication format so I have seen this in the wild.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40156
llvm-svn: 319104
The existing library assumed that a stream's length would never
change. This makes some things simpler, but it's not flexible
enough for what we need, especially for writable streams where
what you really want is for each call to write to actually append.
llvm-svn: 319070
DWARF4 relative DW_AT_high_pc values are now displayed as absolute
addresses. The relative value is only shown when explicitly dumping the
forms, i.e. in show-form or verbose mode.
```
DW_AT_low_pc (0x0000000000000049)
DW_AT_high_pc (0x00000019)
```
becomes
```
DW_AT_low_pc (0x0000000000000049)
DW_AT_high_pc (0x0000000000000062)
```
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40317
rdar://35416943
llvm-svn: 319044
As a side effect, the .debug_line section will be dumped in physical
order, rather than in the order that compile units refer to their
associated portions of the .debug_line section. These are probably
always the same order anyway, and no tests noticed the difference.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39854
llvm-svn: 318839
It turns out this #include isn't used from Host.h anyway,
but by having it it causes circular include dependencies.
This issues only surfaced while I was working on a separate
patch, so I'm submitting this first so that it's independent
of the other, unrelated patch.
llvm-svn: 318489
Initial changes to support debugging PE/COFF files with LLDB on Windows through DIA SDK.
There is another set of changes required on the LLDB side before this does anything.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39517
llvm-svn: 318403