Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris da375a67f8 [XRay] Improve FDR trace handling and error messaging
Summary:
This change covers a number of things spanning LLVM and compiler-rt,
which are related in a non-trivial way.

In LLVM, we have a library that handles the FDR mode even log loading,
which uses C++'s runtime polymorphism feature to better faithfully
represent the events that are written down by the FDR mode runtime. We
do this by interpreting a trace that's serliased in a common format
agreed upon by both the trace loading library and the FDR mode runtime.
This library is under active development, which consists of features
allowing us to reconstitute a higher-level event log.

This event log is used by the conversion and visualisation tools we have
for interpreting XRay traces.

One of the tools we have is a diagnostic tool in llvm-xray called
`fdr-dump` which we've been using to debug our expectations of what the
FDR runtime should be writing and what the logical FDR event log
structures are. We use this fairly extensively to reason about why some
non-trivial traces we're generating with FDR mode runtimes fail to
convert or fail to parse correctly.

One of these failures we've found in manual debugging of some of the
traces we've seen involve an inconsistency between the buffer extents (a
record indicating how many bytes to follow are part of a logical
thread's event log) and the record of the bytes written into the log --
sometimes it turns out the data could be garbage, due to buffers being
recycled, but sometimes we're seeing the buffer extent indicating a log
is "shorter" than the actual records associated with the buffer. This
case happens particularly with function entry records with a call
argument.

This change for now updates the FDR mode runtime to write the bytes for
the function call and arg record before updating the buffer extents
atomically, allowing multiple threads to see a consistent view of the
data in the buffer using the atomic counter associated with a buffer.
What we're trying to prevent here is partial updates where we see the
intermediary updates to the buffer extents (function record size then
call argument record size) becoming observable from another thread, for
instance, one doing the serialization/flushing.

To do both diagnose this issue properly, we need to be able to honour
the extents being set in the `BufferExtents` records marking the
beginning of the logical buffers when reading an FDR trace. Since LLVM
doesn't use C++'s RTTI mechanism, we instead follow the advice in the
documentation for LLVM Style RTTI
(https://llvm.org/docs/HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI.html). We then rely on
this RTTI feature to ensure that our file-based record producer (our
streaming "deserializer") can honour the extents of individual buffers
as we interpret traces.

This also sets us up to be able to eventually do smart
skipping/continuation of FDR logs, seeking instead to find BufferExtents
records in cases where we find potentially recoverable errors. In the
meantime, we make this change to operate in a strict mode when reading
logical buffers with extent records.

Reviewers: mboerger

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, jfb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54201

llvm-svn: 346473
2018-11-09 06:26:48 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris 59439dd069 [XRay] Use TSC delta encoding for custom/typed events
Summary:
This change updates the version number for FDR logs to 5, and update the
trace processing to support changes in the custom event records.

In the runtime, since we're already writing down the record preamble to
handle CPU migrations and TSC wraparound, we can use the same TSC delta
encoding in the custom event and typed event records that we use in
function event records. We do the same change to typed events (which
were unsupported before this change in the trace processing) which now
show up in the trace.

Future changes should increase our testing coverage to make custom and
typed events as first class entities in the FDR mode log processing
tools.

This change is also a good example of how we end up supporting new
record types in the FDR mode implementation. This shows the places where
new record types are added and supported.

Depends on D54139.

Reviewers: mboerger

Subscribers: hiraditya, arphaman, jfb, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54140

llvm-svn: 346293
2018-11-07 04:37:42 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris 6b67ff0300 [XRay] Add CPU ID in Custom Event FDR Records
Summary:
This change cuts across compiler-rt and llvm, to increment the FDR log
version number to 4, and include the CPU ID in the custom event records.

This is a step towards allowing us to change the `llvm::xray::Trace`
object to start representing both custom and typed events in the stream
of records. Follow-on changes will allow us to change the kinds of
records we're presenting in the stream of traces, to incorporate the
data in custom/typed events.

A follow-on change will handle the typed event case, where it may not
fit within the 15-byte buffer for metadata records.

This work is part of the larger effort to enable writing analysis and
processing tools using a common in-memory representation of the events
found in traces. The work will focus on porting existing tools in LLVM
to use the common representation and informing the design of a
library/framework for expressing trace event analysis as C++ programs.

Reviewers: mboerger, eizan

Subscribers: hiraditya, mgrang, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53920

llvm-svn: 345798
2018-11-01 00:18:52 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris ec605d3846 [XRay] Write the TSC along with CPUID
Fixes builds in non-little-endian systems.

This is a follow-up to D51911.

llvm-svn: 341909
2018-09-11 07:27:59 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris c1dceee50b [XRay] Fix FunctionRecord serialization
This change makes the writer implementation more consistent with the way
fields are written down to avoid assumptions on bitfield order and
padding. We also fix an inconsistency between the type returned by the
`delta()` accessor to match the data member it's returning.

This is a follow-up to D51289 and D51210.

llvm-svn: 341230
2018-08-31 17:49:59 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris 98717978c9 [XRay] Make the FDRTraceWriter Endian-aware
Before this patch, the FDRTraceWriter would not take endianness into
account when writing data into the output stream.

This is a follow-up to D51289 and D51210.

llvm-svn: 341223
2018-08-31 16:08:38 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris 7a07a41cbb [XRay] Attempt to fix failure on Windows
Original version of the code relied on implementation-defined order of bitfields.

Follow-up on D51210.

llvm-svn: 341194
2018-08-31 10:03:52 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris 17045975da [XRay] Help gcc disambiguate names
Follow-up to D51210.

llvm-svn: 341042
2018-08-30 09:04:12 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris d859668c76 [XRay] Move out template and use perfect forwarding
Follow up to D51210.

llvm-svn: 341032
2018-08-30 08:15:42 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris edf11fd450 [XRay] Remove attribute packed
Followup to D51210.

llvm-svn: 341030
2018-08-30 07:57:32 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris a6c6343a78 [XRay] FDRTraceWriter and FDR Trace Loading
Summary:
This is the first step in the larger refactoring and reduction of
D50441.

This step in the process does the following:

- Introduces more granular types of `Record`s representing the many
  kinds of records written/read by the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) mode
  `Trace` loading function(s).

- Introduces an abstract `RecordVisitor` type meant to handle the
  processing of the various `Record` derived types. This `RecordVisitor`
  has two implementations in this patch: `RecordInitializer` and
  `FDRTraceWriter`.

- We also introduce a convenience interface for building a collection of
  `Record` instances called a `LogBuilder`. This allows us to generate
  sequences of `Record` instances manually (used in unit tests but
  useful otherwise).

- The`FDRTraceWriter` class implements the `RecordVisitor` interface and
  handles the writing of metadata records to a `raw_ostream`. We
  demonstrate that in the unit test, we can generate in-memory FDR mode
  traces using the specific `Record` derived types, which we load
  through the `loadTrace(...)` function yielding valid `Trace` objects.

This patch introduces the required types and concepts for us to start
replacing the logic implemented in the `loadFDRLog` function to use the
more granular types. In subsequent patches, we will introduce more
visitor implementations which isolate the verification, printing,
indexing, production/consumption, and finally the conversion of the FDR
mode logs.

The overarching goal of these changes is to make handling FDR mode logs
better tested, more understandable, more extensible, and more
systematic. This will also allow us to better represent the execution
trace, as we improve the fidelity of the events we represent in an XRay
`Trace` object, which we intend to do after FDR mode log processing is
in better shape.

Reviewers: eizan

Reviewed By: eizan

Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51210

llvm-svn: 341029
2018-08-30 07:22:21 +00:00