In some senario, LLVM will remove llvm.dbg.labels in IR. For example,
when the labels are in unreachable blocks, these labels will not
be generated in LLVM IR. In the case, these debug labels will have
address zero as their address. It is not legal address for debugger to
set breakpoints or query sources. So, the patch inhibits the address info
(DW_AT_low_pc) of removed labels.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51908
llvm-svn: 342943
Currently, we emit DW_AT_addr_base that points to the beginning of
the .debug_addr section. That is not correct for the DWARF5 case because address
table contains the header and the attribute should point to the first entry
following the header.
This is currently the reason why LLDB does not work with such executables correctly.
Patch fixes the issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52168
llvm-svn: 342635
std::vector::iterator type may be a pointer, then
iterator::value_type fails to compile since iterator is not a class,
namespace, or enumeration.
Patch by orivej (Orivej Desh)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52142
llvm-svn: 342354
This patch removes addBlockByrefAddress(), it is dead code as far as
clang is concerned: Every byref block capture is emitted with a
complex expression that is equivalent to what this function does.
rdar://problem/31629055
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51763
llvm-svn: 341737
In DwarfDebug::collectEntityInfo(), if the label entity is processed in
DbgLabels list, it means the label is not optimized out. There is no
need to generate debug info for it with null position.
llvm-svn: 341513
Normalize common kinds of DWARF sub-expressions to make debug info
encoding a bit more compact:
DW_OP_constu [X < 32] -> DW_OP_litX
DW_OP_constu [all ones] -> DW_OP_lit0, DW_OP_not (64-bit only)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51640
llvm-svn: 341457
This removes the FrameAccess struct that was added to the interface
in D51537, since the PseudoValue from the MachineMemoryOperand
can be safely casted to a FixedStackPseudoSourceValue.
Reviewers: MatzeB, thegameg, javed.absar
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51617
llvm-svn: 341454
For instructions that spill/fill to and from multiple frame-indices
in a single instruction, hasStoreToStackSlot and hasLoadFromStackSlot
should return an array of accesses, rather than just the first encounter
of such an access.
This better describes FI accesses for AArch64 (paired) LDP/STP
instructions.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, gberry, thegameg, rengolin, javed.absar, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51537
llvm-svn: 341301
Summary:
This is a continuation of https://reviews.llvm.org/D49727
Below the original text, current changes in the comments:
Currently, in line with GCC, when specifying reserved registers like sp or pc on an inline asm() clobber list, we don't always preserve the original value across the statement. And in general, overwriting reserved registers can have surprising results.
For example:
extern int bar(int[]);
int foo(int i) {
int a[i]; // VLA
asm volatile(
"mov r7, #1"
:
:
: "r7"
);
return 1 + bar(a);
}
Compiled for thumb, this gives:
$ clang --target=arm-arm-none-eabi -march=armv7a -c test.c -o - -S -O1 -mthumb
...
foo:
.fnstart
@ %bb.0: @ %entry
.save {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
.setfp r7, sp, #12
add r7, sp, #12
.pad #4
sub sp, #4
movs r1, #7
add.w r0, r1, r0, lsl #2
bic r0, r0, #7
sub.w r0, sp, r0
mov sp, r0
@APP
mov.w r7, #1
@NO_APP
bl bar
adds r0, #1
sub.w r4, r7, #12
mov sp, r4
pop {r4, r5, r6, r7, pc}
...
r7 is used as the frame pointer for thumb targets, and this function needs to restore the SP from the FP because of the variable-length stack allocation a. r7 is clobbered by the inline assembly (and r7 is included in the clobber list), but LLVM does not preserve the value of the frame pointer across the assembly block.
This type of behavior is similar to GCC's and has been discussed on the bugtracker: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11807 . No consensus seemed to have been reached on the way forward. Clang behavior has briefly been discussed on the CFE mailing (starting here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-July/058392.html). I've opted for following Eli Friedman's advice to print warnings when there are reserved registers on the clobber list so as not to diverge from GCC behavior for now.
The patch uses MachineRegisterInfo's target-specific knowledge of reserved registers, just before we convert the inline asm string in the AsmPrinter.
If we find a reserved register, we print a warning:
repro.c:6:7: warning: inline asm clobber list contains reserved registers: R7 [-Winline-asm]
"mov r7, #1"
^
Reviewers: efriedma, olista01, javed.absar
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: eraman, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51165
llvm-svn: 341062
Variables declared with the dllimport attribute are accessed via a
stub variable named __imp_<var>. In MinGW configurations, variables that
aren't declared with a dllimport attribute might still end up imported
from another DLL with runtime pseudo relocs.
For x86_64, this avoids the risk that the target is out of range
for a 32 bit PC relative reference, in case the target DLL is loaded
further than 4 GB from the reference. It also avoids having to make the
text section writable at runtime when doing the runtime fixups, which
makes it worthwhile to do for i386 as well.
Add stub variables for all dso local data references where a definition
of the variable isn't visible within the module, since the DLL data
autoimporting might make them imported even though they are marked as
dso local within LLVM.
Don't do this for variables that actually are defined within the same
module, since we then know for sure that it actually is dso local.
Don't do this for references to functions, since there's no need for
runtime pseudo relocations for autoimporting them; if a function from
a different DLL is called without the appropriate dllimport attribute,
the call just gets routed via a thunk instead.
GCC does something similar since 4.9 (when compiling with -mcmodel=medium
or large; from that version, medium is the default code model for x86_64
mingw), but only for x86_64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51288
llvm-svn: 340942
Firstly, require the symbol to be used within the module. If a
symbol is unused within a module, then by definition it cannot be
address-significant within that module. This condition is useful on all
platforms because it could make symbol tables smaller -- without this
change, emitting an address-significance table could cause otherwise
unused undefined symbols to be added to the object file.
But this change is necessary with COFF specifically in order to
preserve the property that an unreferenced undefined symbol in an IR
module does not result in a link failure. This is already the case for
ELF because ELF linkers only reject links with unresolved symbols if
there is a relocation to that symbol, but COFF linkers require all
undefined symbols to be resolved regardless of relocations. So if
a module contains an unreferenced undefined symbol, we need to make
sure not to add it to the address-significance table (and thus the
symbol table) in case it doesn't end up resolved at link time.
Secondly, do not add dllimport symbols to the table. These symbols
won't be able to be resolved because their definitions live in another
module and are accessed via the IAT, and the address-significance
table has no effect on other modules anyway. It wouldn't make sense
to add the IAT entry symbol to the address-significance table either
because the IAT entry isn't address-significant -- the generated code
never takes its address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51199
llvm-svn: 340648
My previoust test case had skipped CUs from one TU out of a two-TU LTO
scenario, which meant the CU index wasn't needed (as it was unambiguous
which CU a table entry applied to) - expanding the test to use 3 TUs,
skipping one (so long as it's not the last one) shows the indexes are
miscomputed. Fix that with a little indirection for the index.
llvm-svn: 340646
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 340039
well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s.
The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to
use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch
as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it
doesn't really seem worth it.
The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is
now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed)
AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit
these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the
code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support
so that we can write useful tests.
The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the
symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However,
those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics
desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and
de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty
to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands.
The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite
straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax
similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me
use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation
like we use for memoperands.
However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to
change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary
symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things
with MIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833
llvm-svn: 339962
In cases where the debugger load time is a worthwhile tradeoff (or less
costly - such as loading from a DWP instead of a variety of DWOs
(possibly over a high-latency/distributed filesystem)) against object
file size, it can be reasonable to disable pubnames and corresponding
gdb-index creation in the linker.
A backend-flag version of this was implemented for NVPTX in
D44385/r327994 - which was fine for NVPTX which wouldn't mix-and-match
CUs. Now that it's going to be a user-facing option (likely powered by
"-gno-pubnames", the same as GCC) it should be encoded in the
DICompileUnit so it can vary per-CU.
After this, likely the NVPTX support should be migrated to the metadata
& the previous flag implementation should be removed.
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50213
llvm-svn: 339939
Flags in DIBasicType will be used to pass attributes used in
DW_TAG_base_type, such as DW_AT_endianity.
Patch by Chirag Patel!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49610
llvm-svn: 339714
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 339676
The previous name sounds like it inserts cfguard implementation, but it
really just emits the table of address-taken functions. Change the name
to better reflect that.
Clang will be updated in the next commit.
llvm-svn: 339419
When using APPLE extensions, don't duplicate the compiler invocation's
flags both in AT_producer and AT_APPLE_flags.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50453
llvm-svn: 339268
Summary:
Currently, in line with GCC, when specifying reserved registers like sp or pc on an inline asm() clobber list, we don't always preserve the original value across the statement. And in general, overwriting reserved registers can have surprising results.
For example:
```
extern int bar(int[]);
int foo(int i) {
int a[i]; // VLA
asm volatile(
"mov r7, #1"
:
:
: "r7"
);
return 1 + bar(a);
}
```
Compiled for thumb, this gives:
```
$ clang --target=arm-arm-none-eabi -march=armv7a -c test.c -o - -S -O1 -mthumb
...
foo:
.fnstart
@ %bb.0: @ %entry
.save {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
.setfp r7, sp, #12
add r7, sp, #12
.pad #4
sub sp, #4
movs r1, #7
add.w r0, r1, r0, lsl #2
bic r0, r0, #7
sub.w r0, sp, r0
mov sp, r0
@APP
mov.w r7, #1
@NO_APP
bl bar
adds r0, #1
sub.w r4, r7, #12
mov sp, r4
pop {r4, r5, r6, r7, pc}
...
```
r7 is used as the frame pointer for thumb targets, and this function needs to restore the SP from the FP because of the variable-length stack allocation a. r7 is clobbered by the inline assembly (and r7 is included in the clobber list), but LLVM does not preserve the value of the frame pointer across the assembly block.
This type of behavior is similar to GCC's and has been discussed on the bugtracker: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11807 . No consensus seemed to have been reached on the way forward. Clang behavior has briefly been discussed on the CFE mailing (starting here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-July/058392.html). I've opted for following Eli Friedman's advice to print warnings when there are reserved registers on the clobber list so as not to diverge from GCC behavior for now.
The patch uses MachineRegisterInfo's target-specific knowledge of reserved registers, just before we convert the inline asm string in the AsmPrinter.
If we find a reserved register, we print a warning:
```
repro.c:6:7: warning: inline asm clobber list contains reserved registers: R7 [-Winline-asm]
"mov r7, #1"
^
```
Reviewers: eli.friedman, olista01, javed.absar, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, eraman, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49727
llvm-svn: 339257
Summary:
The accelerator tables use the debug_str section to store their strings.
However, they do not support the indirect method of access that is
available for the debug_info section (DW_FORM_strx et al.).
Currently our code is assuming that all strings can/will be referenced
indirectly, and puts all of them into the debug_str_offsets section.
This is generally true for regular (unsplit) dwarf, but in the DWO case,
most of the strings in the debug_str section will only be used from the
accelerator tables. Therefore the contents of the debug_str_offsets
section will be largely unused and bloating the main executable.
This patch rectifies this by teaching the DwarfStringPool to
differentiate between strings accessed directly and indirectly. When a
user inserts a string into the pool it has to declare whether that
string will be referenced directly or not. If at least one user requsts
indirect access, that string will be assigned an index ID and put into
debug_str_offsets table. Otherwise, the offset table is skipped.
This approach reduces the overall binary size (when compiled with
-gdwarf-5 -gsplit-dwarf) in my tests by about 2% (debug_str_offsets is
shrunk by 99%).
Reviewers: probinson, dblaikie, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49493
llvm-svn: 339122
AArch64 ELF ABI does not define a static relocation type for TLS offset within
a module, which makes it impossible for compiler to generate a valid
DW_AT_location content for thread local variables. Currently LLVM generates an
invalid R_AARCH64_ABS64 relocation at the DW_AT_location field for a TLS
variable. That causes trouble for linker because thread local variable does
not have an absolute address at link time. AArch64 GCC solves the problem by
not generating DW_AT_location for thread local variables. We should do the
same in LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43860
llvm-svn: 338655
Summary:
Added an option that allows to emit only '.loc' and '.file' kind debug
directives, but disables emission of the DWARF sections. Required for
NVPTX target to support profiling. It requires '.loc' and '.file'
directives, but does not require any DWARF sections for the profiler.
Reviewers: probinson, echristo, dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46021
llvm-svn: 338616
Getting the DWARF types section is only implemented for ELF object
files. We already disabled emitting debug types in clang (r337717), but
now we also report an fatal error (rather than crashing) when trying to
obtain this section in MC. Additionally we ignore the generate debug
types flag for unsupported target triples.
See PR38190 for more information.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50057
llvm-svn: 338527
This revision implements support for generating DWARFv5 .debug_addr section.
The implementation is pretty straight-forward: we just check the dwarf version
and emit section header if needed.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Reviewed by: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50005
llvm-svn: 338487
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 338390
The test failure was caused by the compiler not emitting a __debug_ranges section with DWARF 4 and
earlier when no ranges are needed. The test checks for the existence regardless.
llvm-svn: 338081
Summary:
NVPTX target dos not use register-based frame information. Instead it
relies on the artificial local_depot that is used instead of the frame
and the data for variables must be emitted relatively to this
local_depot.
Reviewers: tra, jlebar, echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45963
llvm-svn: 338039
Summary:
For NVPTX target the value of `DW_AT_frame_base` attribute must be set
to `DW_OP_call_frame_cfa`.
Reviewers: tra, jlebar, echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45785
llvm-svn: 338036
Previous version of this patch failed on darwin targets because of
different handling of cross-debug-section relocations. This fixes the
tests to emit the DW_AT_str_offsets_base attribute correctly in both
cases. Since doing this is a non-trivial amount of code, and I'm going
to need it in more than one test, I've added a helper function to the
dwarfgen DIE class to do it.
Original commit message follows:
The motivation for this is D49493, where we'd like to test details of
debug_str_offsets behavior which is difficult to trigger from a
traditional test.
This adds the plubming necessary for dwarfgen to generate this section.
The more interesting changes are:
- I've moved emitStringOffsetsTableHeader function from DwarfFile to
DwarfStringPool, so I can generate the section header more easily from
the unit test.
- added a new addAttribute overload taking an MCExpr*. This is used to
generate the DW_AT_str_offsets_base, which links a compile unit to the
offset table.
I've also added a basic test for reading and writing DW_form_strx forms.
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49670
llvm-svn: 338031
This reverts commit r337951.
While that kind of shared constant generally works fine in a MinGW
setting, it broke some cases of inline assembly that worked before:
$ cat const-asm.c
int MULH(int a, int b) {
int rt, dummy;
__asm__ (
"imull %3"
:"=d"(rt), "=a"(dummy)
:"a"(a), "rm"(b)
);
return rt;
}
int func(int a) {
return MULH(a, 1);
}
$ clang -target x86_64-win32-gnu -c const-asm.c -O2
const-asm.c:4:9: error: invalid variant '00000001'
"imull %3"
^
<inline asm>:1:15: note: instantiated into assembly here
imull __real@00000001(%rip)
^
A similar error is produced for i686 as well. The same test with a
target of x86_64-win32-msvc or i686-win32-msvc works fine.
llvm-svn: 338018
GNU binutils tools have no problems with this kind of shared constants,
provided that we actually hook it up completely in AsmPrinter and
produce a global symbol.
This effectively reverts SVN r335918 by hooking the rest of it up
properly.
This feature was implemented originally in SVN r213006, with no reason
for why it can't be used for MinGW other than the fact that GCC doesn't
do it while MSVC does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49646
llvm-svn: 337951
In SVN r334523, the first half of comdat constant pool handling was
hoisted from X86WindowsTargetObjectFile (which despite the name only
was used for msvc targets) into the arch independent
TargetLoweringObjectFileCOFF, but the other half of the handling was
left behind in X86AsmPrinter::GetCPISymbol.
With only half of the handling in place, inconsistent comdat
sections/symbols are created, causing issues with both GNU binutils
(avoided for X86 in SVN r335918) and with the MS linker, which
would complain like this:
fatal error LNK1143: invalid or corrupt file: no symbol for COMDAT section 0x4
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49644
llvm-svn: 337950
This recommits r337910 after fixing an "ambiguous call to addAttribute"
error with some compilers (gcc circa 4.9 and MSVC). It seems that these
compilers will consider a "false -> pointer" conversion during overload
resolution. This creates ambiguity because one I added an overload which
takes a MCExpr * as an argument.
I fix this by making the new overload take MCExpr&, which avoids the
conversion. It also documents the fact that we expect a valid MCExpr
object.
Original commit message follows:
The motivation for this is D49493, where we'd like to test details of
debug_str_offsets behavior which is difficult to trigger from a
traditional test.
This adds the plubming necessary for dwarfgen to generate this section.
The more interesting changes are:
- I've moved emitStringOffsetsTableHeader function from DwarfFile to
DwarfStringPool, so I can generate the section header more easily from
the unit test.
- added a new addAttribute overload taking an MCExpr*. This is used to
generate the DW_AT_str_offsets_base, which links a compile unit to the
offset table.
I've also added a basic test for reading and writing DW_form_strx forms.
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49670
llvm-svn: 337933
This reverts commit r337910 as it's generating "ambiguous call to
addAttribute" errors on some bots.
Will resubmit once I get a chance to look into the problem.
llvm-svn: 337924
Summary:
The motivation for this is D49493, where we'd like to test details of
debug_str_offsets behavior which is difficult to trigger from a
traditional test.
This adds the plubming necessary for dwarfgen to generate this section.
The more interesting changes are:
- I've moved emitStringOffsetsTableHeader function from DwarfFile to
DwarfStringPool, so I can generate the section header more easily from
the unit test.
- added a new addAttribute overload taking an MCExpr*. This is used to
generate the DW_AT_str_offsets_base, which links a compile unit to the
offset table.
I've also added a basic test for reading and writing DW_form_strx forms.
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49670
llvm-svn: 337910
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 337799
Summary:
Each of the four methods had a dozen lines and was doing almost exactly
the same thing: get the appropriate accelerator table kind and insert an
entry into it. I move this common logic to a helper function and make
these methods delegate to it.
This came up in the context of D49493, where I've needed to make adding
a string to a string pool slightly more complicated, and it seemed to
make sense to do it in one place instead of five.
To make this work I've needed to unify the interface of the AccelTable
data types, as some used to store DIE& and others DIE*. I chose to unify
to a reference as that's what the caller uses.
This technically isn't NFC, because it changes the StringPool used for
apple tables in the DWO case (now it uses the main file like DWARF v5
instead of the DWO file). However, that shouldn't matter, as DWO is not
a thing on apple targets (clang frontend simply ignores -gsplit-dwarf).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49542
llvm-svn: 337562
Summary:
This patch makes us generate the debug_names section in response to some
user-facing commands (previously it was only generated if explicitly
selected via the -accel-tables option).
My goal was to make this work for DWARF>=5 (as it's an official part of
that standard), and also, as an extension, for DWARF<5 if one is
explicitly tuning for lldb as a debugger (because it brings a large
performance improvement there).
This is slightly complicated by the fact that the debug_names tables are
incompatible with the DWARF v4 type units (they assume that the type
units are in the debug_info section), and unfortunately, right now we
generate DWARF v4-style type units even for -gdwarf-5. For this reason,
I disable all accelerator tables if the user requested type unit
generation. I do this even for apple tables, as they have the same
problem (in fact generating type units for apple targets makes us crash
even before we get around to emitting the accelerator tables).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie, echristo, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49420
llvm-svn: 337544
Since DWARFv5 rnglists are self descriptive and have distinct encodings
for base-relative (offset_pair) and absolute (start_length) entries,
there's no need to use a base address specifier when describing a lone
address range in a section.
Use that, and improve the test coverage a bit here to include cases like
this and others.
llvm-svn: 337411
The presence of these symbols in the symbol table can cause symbol type
mismatch errors (or undefined symbol errors on emulated TLS targets)
and they can't be ICF'd anyway.
llvm-svn: 337338
For dsymutil we want to store offsets in the accelerator table entries
rather than DIE pointers. In addition, we need a way to communicate
which CU a DIE belongs to. This patch provides support for both of these
issues.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49102
llvm-svn: 337158
and no use of DW_FORM_rnglistx with the DW_AT_ranges attribute.
Reviewer: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49214
llvm-svn: 336927
This is prep for DWARF v5 range list emission. Emission of a single range list is moved
to a static helper function.
Reviewer: jdevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49098
llvm-svn: 336621
When emitting the DWARF accelerator tables from dsymutil, we don't have
a DwarfDebug instance and we use a custom class to represent Dwarf
compile units. This patch adds an interface AccelTableWriterInfo to
abstract these from the Dwarf5AccelTableWriter, so we can have a custom
implementation for this in dsymutil.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49031
llvm-svn: 336529
The replaceAllDbgUsesWith utility helps passes preserve debug info when
replacing one value with another.
This improves upon the existing insertReplacementDbgValues API by:
- Updating debug intrinsics in-place, while preventing use-before-def of
the replacement value.
- Falling back to salvageDebugInfo when a replacement can't be made.
- Moving the responsibiliy for rewriting llvm.dbg.* DIExpressions into
common utility code.
Along with the API change, this teaches replaceAllDbgUsesWith how to
create DIExpressions for three basic integer and pointer conversions:
- The no-op conversion. Applies when the values have the same width, or
have bit-for-bit compatible pointer representations.
- Truncation. Applies when the new value is wider than the old one.
- Zero/sign extension. Applies when the new value is narrower than the
old one.
Testing:
- check-llvm, check-clang, a stage2 `-g -O3` build of clang,
regression/unit testing.
- This resolves a number of mis-sized dbg.value diagnostics from
Debugify.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48676
llvm-svn: 336451
Summary:
.debug_loc section is not supported for NVPTX target. If there is an
object whose location can change during its lifetime, we do not generate
debug location info for this variable.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48730
llvm-svn: 335976
Remove unused ByteStreamer argument from function emitDebugLocValue.
Patch by Nikola Prica.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48590
llvm-svn: 335811
With compilation fix.
Original commit message:
D39788 added a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes
to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag.
This change does following two things on top:
1) Imagine the case when there are -ffunction-sections flag given and there are text sections in COMDATs.
The patch adds a '.stack-size' section into corresponding COMDAT group, so that linker will be able to
eliminate them fast during resolving the COMDATs.
2) Patch sets a SHF_LINK_ORDER flag and links '.stack-size' with the corresponding .text.
With that linker will be able to do -gc-sections on dead stack sizes sections.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46874
llvm-svn: 335336
D39788 added a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes
to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag.
This change does following two things on top:
1) Imagine the case when there are -ffunction-sections flag given and there are text sections in COMDATs.
The patch adds a '.stack-size' section into corresponding COMDAT group, so that linker will be able to
eliminate them fast during resolving the COMDATs.
2) Patch sets a SHF_LINK_ORDER flag and links '.stack-size' with the corresponding .text.
With that linker will be able to do -gc-sections on dead stack sizes sections.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46874
llvm-svn: 335332
Codeview references to unnamed structs and unions are expected to refer to the
complete type definition instead of a forward reference so Visual Studio can
resolve the type properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32498
llvm-svn: 334382
In DWARF v5, the DWO ID is in the (split/skeleton) CU header, not an
attribute on the CU DIE.
This changes the size of those headers, so use the parsed size whenever
we have one, for simplicitly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47158
llvm-svn: 333004
This reapplies commits: r330271, r330592, r330779.
[DEBUG] Initial adaptation of NVPTX target for debug info emission.
Summary:
Patch adds initial emission of the debug info for NVPTX target.
Currently, only .file and .loc directives are emitted, everything else is
commented out to not break the compilation of Cuda.
llvm-svn: 332689
Previously we emitted 20-byte SHA1 hashes. This is overkill
for identifying debug info records, and has the negative side
effect of making object files bigger and links slower. By
using only the last 8 bytes of a SHA1, we get smaller object
files and ~10% faster links.
This modifies the format of the .debug$H section by adding a new
value for the hash algorithm field, so that the linker will still
work when its object files have an old format.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46855
llvm-svn: 332669
Summary:
If we are not emitting a linkage name in the .debug_info sections, we
should not add it into the index either. This makes sure our index is
consistent with the actual debug info.
I am also explicitly setting the --dwarf-linkage-names=All in the
name-collsions test as that one would now fail on targets where this
defaults to "Abstract" (in fact, it would have failed already if there
wasn't a bug in the DWARF verifier, which I fix as well).
Reviewers: probinson, aprantl, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46748
llvm-svn: 332246
The DEBUG() macro is very generic so it might clash with other projects.
The renaming was done as follows:
- git grep -l 'DEBUG' | xargs sed -i 's/\bDEBUG\s\?(/LLVM_DEBUG(/g'
- git diff -U0 master | ../clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py -i -p1 -style LLVM
- Manual change to APInt
- Manually chage DOCS as regex doesn't match it.
In the transition period the DEBUG() macro is still present and aliased
to the LLVM_DEBUG() one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43624
llvm-svn: 332240
length excluding the table header. Instead it must encode the contribution length minus the length
field itself.
Reviewer: JDevliegehere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45922
llvm-svn: 332030
Reviewed by: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, espindola
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44560
Summary:
The .debug_line parser previously reported errors by printing to stderr and
return false. This is not particularly helpful for clients of the library code,
as it prevents them from handling the errors in a manner based on the calling
context. This change switches to using llvm::Error and callbacks to indicate
what problems were detected during parsing, and has updated clients to handle
the errors in a location-specific manner. In general, this means that they
continue to do the same thing to external users. Below, I have outlined what
the known behaviour changes are, relating to this change.
There are two levels of "errors" in the new error mechanism, to broadly
distinguish between different fail states of the parser, since not every
failure will prevent parsing of the unit, or of subsequent unit. Malformed
table errors that prevent reading the remainder of the table (reported by
returning them) and other minor issues representing problems with parsing that
do not prevent attempting to continue reading the table (reported by calling a
specified callback funciton). The only example of this currently is when the
last sequence of a unit is unterminated. However, I think it would be good to
change the handling of unrecognised opcodes to report as minor issues as well,
rather than just printing to the stream if --verbose is used (this would be a
subsequent change however).
I have substantially extended the DwarfGenerator to be able to handle
custom-crafted .debug_line sections, allowing for comprehensive unit-testing
of the parser code. For now, I am just adding unit tests to cover the basic
error reporting, and positive cases, and do not currently intend to test every
part of the parser, although the framework should be sufficient to do so at a
later point.
Known behaviour changes:
- The dump function in DWARFContext now does not attempt to read subsequent
tables when searching for a specific offset, if the unit length field of a
table before the specified offset is a reserved value.
- getOrParseLineTable now returns a useful Error if an invalid offset is
encountered, rather than simply a nullptr.
- The parse functions no longer use `WithColor::warning` directly to report
errors, allowing LLD to call its own warning function.
- The existing parse error messages have been updated to not specifically
include "warning" in their message, allowing consumers to determine what
severity the problem is.
- If the line table version field appears to have a value less than 2, an
informative error is returned, instead of just false.
- If the line table unit length field uses a reserved value, an informative
error is returned, instead of just false.
- Dumping of .debug_line.dwo sections is now implemented the same as regular
.debug_line sections.
- Verbose dumping of .debug_line[.dwo] sections now prints the prologue, if
there is a prologue error, just like non-verbose dumping.
As a helper for the generator code, I have re-added emitInt64 to the
AsmPrinter code. This previously existed, but was removed way back in r100296,
presumably because it was dead at the time.
This change also requires a change to LLD, which will be committed separately.
llvm-svn: 331971
Because we create a new kind of debug instruction, DBG_LABEL, we need to
check all passes which use isDebugValue() to check MachineInstr is debug
instruction or not. When expelling debug instructions, we should expel
both DBG_VALUE and DBG_LABEL. So, I create a new function,
isDebugInstr(), in MachineInstr to check whether the MachineInstr is
debug instruction or not.
This patch has no new test case. I have run regression test and there is
no difference in regression test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45342
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 331844
In order to convert LLVM IR to MachineInstr, we need a new TargetOpcode,
DBG_LABEL, to ‘lower’ intrinsic llvm.dbg.label. The patch
creates this new TargetOpcode and convert intrinsic llvm.dbg.label to
MachineInstr through SelectionDAG.
In SelectionDAG, debug information is stored in SDDbgInfo. We create a
new data member of SDDbgInfo for labels and use the new data member,
SDDbgLabel, to create DBG_LABEL MachineInstr.
The new DBG_LABEL MachineInstr uses label metadata from LLVM IR as its
parameter. So, the backend could get metadata information of labels from
DBG_LABEL MachineInstr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45341
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 331842
In order to set breakpoints on labels and list source code around
labels, we need collect debug information for labels, i.e., label
name, the function label belong, line number in the file, and the
address label located. In order to keep these information in LLVM
IR and to allow backend to generate debug information correctly.
We create a new kind of metadata for labels, DILabel. The format
of DILabel is
!DILabel(scope: !1, name: "foo", file: !2, line: 3)
We hope to keep debug information as much as possible even the
code is optimized. So, we create a new kind of intrinsic for label
metadata to avoid the metadata is eliminated with basic block.
The intrinsic will keep existing if we keep it from optimized out.
The format of the intrinsic is
llvm.dbg.label(metadata !1)
It has only one argument, that is the DILabel metadata. The
intrinsic will follow the label immediately. Backend could get the
label metadata through the intrinsic's parameter.
We also create DIBuilder API for labels to be used by Frontend.
Frontend could use createLabel() to allocate DILabel objects, and use
insertLabel() to insert llvm.dbg.label intrinsic in LLVM IR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45024
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 331841
Before SVN r244158, codeview debug info was emitted always
emitted for msvc if debug info was enabled, but that commit
added a module flag.
Since it's still restricted by the flag, we can allow it
for any target if the user requests it, not only msvc (and
windows-itanium, added in SVN r287567).
Add a test for emitting it for a mingw target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46303
llvm-svn: 331809
The size of an object cannot be less than the emitted size of all the
contained elements. This would cause an overflow in padding size
calculation. Add an assert to catch this.
Patch by Suyog Sarda.
llvm-svn: 331376
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
This appears to have some issues associated with the file directive output
causing multiple global symbols with the name "file" to be emitted into a
startup section. I'm investigating more specific causes and working with the
original author.
This reverts commit r330271.
Also Revert "[DEBUGINFO, NVPTX] Add the test for the debug info of the local"
This reverts commit r330592 and the follow up of 330779 as the testcase is dependent upon r330271.
llvm-svn: 331237
Teach AsmParser to check with Assembler for when evaluating constant
expressions. This improves the handing of preprocessor expressions
that must be resolved at parse time. This idiom can be found as
assembling-time assertion checks in source-level assemblers. Note that
this relies on the MCStreamer to keep sufficient tabs on Section /
Fragment information which the MCAsmStreamer does not. As a result the
textual output may fail where the equivalent object generation would
pass. This can most easily be resolved by folding the MCAsmStreamer
and MCObjectStreamer together which is planned for in a separate
patch.
Currently, this feature is only enabled for assembly input, keeping IR
compilation consistent between assembly and object generation.
Reviewers: echristo, rnk, probinson, espindola, peter.smith
Reviewed By: peter.smith
Subscribers: eraman, peter.smith, arichardson, jyknight, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45164
llvm-svn: 331218
See r331124 for how I made a list of files missing the include.
I then ran this Python script:
for f in open('filelist.txt'):
f = f.strip()
fl = open(f).readlines()
found = False
for i in xrange(len(fl)):
p = '#include "llvm/'
if not fl[i].startswith(p):
continue
if fl[i][len(p):] > 'Config':
fl.insert(i, '#include "llvm/Config/llvm-config.h"\n')
found = True
break
if not found:
print 'not found', f
else:
open(f, 'w').write(''.join(fl))
and then looked through everything with `svn diff | diffstat -l | xargs -n 1000 gvim -p`
and tried to fix include ordering and whatnot.
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 331184
For local variables the first DW_OP_deref is consumed by turning the
location kind into a memeory location, but that only makes sense for
values that are in a register to begin with, which cannot happen for
global variables that are attached to a symbol.
rdar://problem/39741860
This reapplies r330970 after fixing an uncovered bug in r331086 and
working around the situation caused by it.
llvm-svn: 331090
For local variables the first DW_OP_deref is consumed by turning the
location kind into a memeory location, but that only makes sense for
values that are in a register to begin with, which cannot happen for
global variables that are attached to a symbol.
rdar://problem/39741860
llvm-svn: 330970
Summary:
Patch adds initial emission of the debug info for NVPTX target.
Currently, only .file and .loc directives are emitted, everything else is
commented out to not break the compilation of Cuda.
Reviewers: echristo, jlebar, tra, jholewinski
Subscribers: mgorny, aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41827
llvm-svn: 330271
Summary:
Previously we crashed for the combination of the two features because we
tried to reference the dwo CU from the main object file. The fix
consists of two items:
- reference the skeleton CU from the name index (the consumer is
expected to use the skeleton CU to find the real data).
- use the main object file string pool for the strings in the index
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45566
llvm-svn: 330249