This patch restores the ARM mode if the user's inline assembly
does not. In the object streamer, it ensures that instructions
following the inline assembly are encoded correctly and that
correct mapping symbols are emitted. For the asm streamer, it
emits a .arm or .thumb directive.
This patch does not ensure that the inline assembly contains
the ADR instruction to switch modes at runtime.
The problem we need to solve is code like this:
int foo(int a, int b) {
int r = a + b;
asm volatile(
".align 2 \n"
".arm \n"
"add r0,r0,r0 \n"
: : "r"(r));
return r+1;
}
If we compile this function in thumb mode then the inline assembly
will switch to arm mode. We need to make sure that we switch back to
thumb mode after emitting the inline assembly or we will incorrectly
encode the instructions that follow (i.e. the assembly instructions
for return r+1).
Based on patch by David Peixotto
Change-Id: Ib57f6d2d78a22afad5de8693fba6230ff56ba48b
llvm-svn: 199818
to not guess at a symbol name in some cases.
The problem is that in object files assembled starting at address 0, when
trying to symbolicate something that starts like this:
% cat x.s
_t1:
vpshufd $0x0, %xmm1, %xmm0
the symbolic disassembly can end up like this:
% otool -tV x.o
x.o:
(__TEXT,__text) section
_t1:
0000000000000000 vpshufd $_t1, %xmm1, %xmm0
Which is in this case produced incorrect symbolication.
But it is useful in some cases to use the SymbolLookUp() call back
to guess at some immediate values. For example one like this
that does not have an external relocation entry:
% cat y.s
_t1:
movl $_d1, %eax
.data
_d1: .long 0
% clang -c -arch i386 y.s
% otool -tV y.o
y.o:
(__TEXT,__text) section
_t1:
0000000000000000 movl $_d1, %eax
% otool -rv y.o
y.o:
Relocation information (__TEXT,__text) 1 entries
address pcrel length extern type scattered symbolnum/value
00000001 False long False VANILLA False 2 (__DATA,__data)
So the change is based on it is not likely that an immediate Value
coming from an instruction field of a width of 1 byte, other than branches
and items with relocation, are not likely symbol addresses.
With the change the first case above simply becomes:
% otool -tV x.o
x.o:
(__TEXT,__text) section
_t1:
0000000000000000 vpshufd $0x0, %xmm1, %xmm0
and the second case continues to work as expected.
rdar://14863405
llvm-svn: 199698
with raw_ostream's write_escaped() method.
For example darwin's otool(1) program that uses the llvm
disassembler now produces disassembly like this:
leaq 0x7b(%rip), %rdi ## literal pool for: "%f\ntoto\n"
and not print the new lines which messes up the output.
rdar://15145300
llvm-svn: 199407
ARM assembly syntax uses @ for a comment, execpt for the second
parameter of the .symver directive which requires @ as part of the
symbol name. This commit fixes the parsing of this directive by
adding a special case for ARM for this one argumnet.
To make the change we had to move the AllowAtInIdentifier variable
to the MCAsmLexer interface (from AsmLexer) and expose a setter for
the value. The ELFAsmParser then toggles this value when parsing
the second argument to the .symver directive for a target that
uses @ as a comment symbol
llvm-svn: 199339
This reverts commit r198865 which reverts r198851.
ASan identified a use-of-uninitialized of the DwarfTypeUnit::Ty variable
in skeleton type units.
llvm-svn: 198908
Modern versions of OSX/Darwin's ld (ld64 > 97.17) have an optimisation present that allows the back end to omit relocations (and replace them with an absolute difference) for FDE some text section refs.
This patch allows a backend to opt-in to this behaviour by setting "DwarfFDESymbolsUseAbsDiff". At present, this is only enabled for modern x86 OSX ports.
test changes by David Fang.
llvm-svn: 198744
take type from the new symbol but merge them so that the type
is never "downgraded".
This is probably quite rare, except for IFUNC symbols which
we used to misassemble, losing the IFUNC type.
Fixes#18372.
llvm-svn: 198706
subsequent changes are easier to review. About to fix some layering
issues, and wanted to separate out the necessary churn.
Also comment and sink the include of "Windows.h" in three .inc files to
match the usage in Memory.inc.
llvm-svn: 198685
Introduce a new virtual method Note into the AsmParser. This completements the
existing Warning and Error methods. Use the new method to clean up the output
of the unwind routines in the ARM AsmParser.
llvm-svn: 198661
SymbolLookUp() call back to return a demangled C++ name to
be used as a comment.
For example darwin's otool(1) program the uses the llvm
disassembler now can produce disassembly like:
callq __ZNK4llvm6Target20createMCDisassemblerERKNS_15MCSubtargetInfoE ## llvm::Target::createMCDisassembler(llvm::MCSubtargetInfo const&) const
Also fix a bug in LLVMDisasmInstruction() that was not flushing
the raw_svector_ostream for the disassembled instruction string
before copying it to the output buffer that was causing truncation
of the output.
rdar://10173828
llvm-svn: 198637
This reverts commit r198441.
This change doesn't build on Windows, and doesn't do the right thing on
Linux and other platforms that don't use a _Z prefix instead of __Z for
C++ names.
It also had no tests, so it wasn't clear how to fix it forward.
llvm-svn: 198445
symbol name, also put the human readable name in a comment.
Also fix a bug in LLVMDisasmInstruction() that was not flushing
the raw_svector_ostream for the disassembled instruction string
before copying it to the output buffer that was causing truncation
of the output.
rdar://10173828
llvm-svn: 198441
Before this patch any program that wanted to know the final symbol name of a
GlobalValue had to link with Target.
This patch implements a compromise solution where the mangler uses DataLayout.
This way, any tool that already links with Target (llc, clang) gets the exact
behavior as before and new IR files can be mangled without linking with Target.
With this patch the mangler is constructed with just a DataLayout and DataLayout
is extended to include the information the Mangler needs.
llvm-svn: 198438
The GNU assembler supports .rep as an alias for .rept. This simply creates the
alias for it and introduces a test for both .rept and .rep.
llvm-svn: 198097
This callback is invoked when the parse has finished successfuly. It
will be used to write out ARM constant pools to implement the ldr
pseudo.
llvm-svn: 197706
The .end directive indicates the end of the file. No further instructions are
processed after a .end directive is encountered.
One potential (glaringly obvious) optimisation that could be pursued here is to
extend MCAsmParser with a DiscardRemainder method to avoid processing lexemes to
the end of the file. It was unclear at this point if that would be worth
adding, and could easily be added in a follow on change.
Signed-off-by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
llvm-svn: 197547
Without this, assembling clang's disassembly would produce an object
file with the IMAGE_SCN_CNT_INITIALIZED_DATA section characteristic
rather than the uninitialized one. link.exe would warn when merging
comdats with different flags.
llvm-svn: 197529
This commit does not complete the type units feature - there are issues
around fission support (skeletal type units, pubtypes/pubnames) and
hashing of some types including those containing references to types in
other type units.
Originally committed as r197073 and reverted in r197079.
Recommitted as r197197 to reproduce the failure and reverted as r197199
Turns out there was unstable ordering in the type unit dumping code.
Fixed by using MapVector in DWARFContext to store the debug_types
comdat sections.
Recommitted as r197210 with a fix to dumping and reverted as r197211
because I was a bit gun shy and thought I saw a failure that turned out
to be unrelated.
So here we go - once more with feeling! \o/
llvm-svn: 197275
This commit does not complete the type units feature - there are issues
around fission support (skeletal type units, pubtypes/pubnames) and
hashing of some types including those containing references to types in
other type units.
Originally committed as r197073 and reverted in r197079.
Recommitted as r197197 to reproduce the failure and reverted as r197199
Turns out there was unstable ordering in the type unit dumping code.
Fixed by using MapVector in DWARFContext to store the debug_types
comdat sections.
llvm-svn: 197210
This commit does not complete the type units feature - there are issues
around fission support (skeletal type units, pubtypes/pubnames) and
hashing of some types including those containing references to types in
other type units.
Originally committed as r197073 and reverted in r197079.
This commit originally got jumbled up with another build-breaking commit
and I can't find the failures I thought this caused anymore.
Recommitting to hopefully get some clean buildbot results to work from.
I have a sneaking suspicion there's unstable output in the comdat group
output of MCStreamer...
llvm-svn: 197197
This reverts commit r197073.
The test seems to be failing on some buildbots for unknown reasons.
Reverting until I can figure that out. If anyone's got a reproduction
(.s and .o together would be great) - I'd really appreciate it.
llvm-svn: 197079
This commit does not complete the type units feature - there are issues
around fission support (skeletal type units, pubtypes/pubnames) and
hashing of some types including those containing references to types in
other type units.
llvm-svn: 197073
This re-lands commit r196876, which was reverted in r196879.
The tests have been fixed to pass on platforms with a stack alignment
larger than 4.
Update to clang side tests will land shortly.
llvm-svn: 196939
For stack frames requiring realignment, three pointers may be needed:
- ebp to address incoming arguments
- esi (could be any callee-saved register) to address locals
- esp to address outgoing arguments
We would use esi unconditionally without verifying that it did not
conflict with inline assembly.
This change doesn't do the verification, it simply emits a fatal error
on functions that use stack realignment, dynamic SP adjustments, and
inline assembly.
Because stack realignment is common on Windows, we also no longer assume
that MS inline assembly clobbers esp. Instead, we analyze the inline
instructions for implicit definitions and check if esp is there. If so,
we require the use of a base pointer and consider it in the condition
above.
Mostly fixes PR16830, but we could try harder to find a non-conflicting
base pointer.
Reviewers: sunfish
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1317
llvm-svn: 196876
MCJIT needs to be able to run in hostile environments, even when PWD
is invalid. There's no need to crash MCJIT in this case.
The obvious fix is to simply leave MCContext's CompilationDir empty
when PWD can't be determined. This way, MCJIT clients,
and other clients that link with LLVM don’t need a valid working directory.
If we do want to guarantee valid CompilationDir, that should be done
only for clients of getCompilationDir(). This is as simple as checking
for an empty string.
The only current use of getCompilationDir is EmitGenDwarfInfo, which
won’t conceivably run with an invalid working dir. However, in the
purely hypothetically and untestable case that this happens, the
AT_comp_dir will be omitted from the compilation_unit DIE.
llvm-svn: 196874
This commit caches the value of the AllowAtInIdentifier variable as
a class variable in AsmLexer. We do this to avoid repeated MAI
queries and string comparisons each time we lex an identifier.
llvm-svn: 196622
The integrated assembler fails to properly lex arm comments when
they are adjacent to an identifier in the input stream. The reason
is that the arm comment symbol '@' is also used as symbol variant in
other assembly languages so when lexing an identifier it allows the
'@' symbol as part of the identifier.
Example:
$ cat comment.s
foo:
add r0, r0@got to parse this as a comment
$ llvm-mc -triple armv7 comment.s
comment.s:4:18: error: unexpected token in argument list
add r0, r0@got to parse this as a comment
^
This should be parsed as correctly as `add r0, r0`.
This commit modifes the assembly lexer to not include the '@' symbol
in identifiers when lexing for targets that use '@' for comments.
llvm-svn: 196607
ELF_Other_Weakref and ELF_Other_ThumbFunc seems to be LLVM
internal ELF symbol flags. These should not be emitted to
object file.
This commit defines ELF_STO_Shift for the target-defined
flags for st_other, and increase the value of
ELF_Other_Shift to 16.
llvm-svn: 196440
ARM symbol variants are written with parens instead of @ like this:
.word __GLOBAL_I_a(target1)
This commit adds support for parsing these symbol variants in
expressions. We introduce a new flag to MCAsmInfo that indicates the
parser should use parens to parse the symbol variant. The expression
parser is modified to look for symbol variants using parens instead
of @ when the corresponding MCAsmInfo flag is true.
The MCAsmInfo parens flag is enabled only for ARM on ELF.
By adding this flag to MCAsmInfo, we are able to get rid of
redundant ARM-specific symbol variants and use the generic variants
instead (e.g. VK_GOT instead of VK_ARM_GOT). We use the new
UseParensForSymbolVariant attribute in MCAsmInfo to correctly print
the symbol variants for arm.
To achive this we need to keep a handle to the MCAsmInfo in the
MCSymbolRefExpr class that we can check when printing the symbol
variant.
Updated Tests:
Changed case of symbol variant to match the generic kind.
test/CodeGen/ARM/tls-models.ll
test/CodeGen/ARM/tls1.ll
test/CodeGen/ARM/tls2.ll
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/tls1.ll
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/tls2.ll
PR18080
llvm-svn: 196424
With this patch we use simple names for COMDAT sections (like .text or .bss).
This matches the MSVC behavior.
When merging it is the COMDAT symbol that is used to decide if two sections
should be merged, so there is no point in building a fancy name.
This survived a bootstrap on mingw32.
llvm-svn: 195798
This patch fixes a bug in the assembler that was causing bad code to
be emitted. When switching modes in an assembly file (e.g. arm to
thumb mode) we would always emit the opcode from the original mode.
Consider this small example:
$ cat align.s
.code 16
foo:
add r0, r0
.align 3
add r0, r0
$ llvm-mc -triple armv7-none-linux align.s -filetype=obj -o t.o
$ llvm-objdump -triple thumbv7 -d t.o
Disassembly of section .text:
foo:
0: 00 44 add r0, r0
2: 00 f0 20 e3 blx #4195904
6: 00 00 movs r0, r0
8: 00 44 add r0, r0
This shows that we have actually emitted an arm nop (e320f000)
instead of a thumb nop. Unfortunately, this encodes to a thumb
branch which causes bad things to happen when compiling assembly
code with align directives.
The fix is to notify the ARMAsmBackend when we switch mode. The
MCMachOStreamer was already doing this correctly. This patch makes
the same change for the MCElfStreamer.
There is still a bug in the way nops are emitted for alignment
because the MCAlignment fragment does not store the correct mode.
The ARMAsmBackend will emit nops for the last mode it knew about. In
the example above, we still generate an arm nop if we add a `.code
32` to the end of the file.
PR18019
llvm-svn: 195677
These should not use COMDATs. GNU as uses .bss for .lcomm and section 0 for
.comm.
Given
static int a;
int b;
MSVC puts both in .bss. This patch then puts both .comm and .lcomm on .bss. With
this change we agree with gas on .lcomm, are much closer on .comm and clang-cl
matches msvc on the above example.
llvm-svn: 195654
This is the first step to fix pr17918.
It extends the .section directive a bit, inspired by what the ELF one looks
like. The problem with using linkonce is that given
.section foo
.linkonce....
.section foo
.linkonce
we would already have switched sections when getting to .linkonce. The cleanest
solution seems to be to add the comdat information in the .section itself.
llvm-svn: 195148
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file. The memory leaks in this version have been fixed. Thanks
Alexey for pointing them out.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 195064
This reverts commit r190888, to fix PR17967. The original change wasn't
the right way to get @feat.00 into the object file. The right fix is to
make @feat.00 be a global symbol.
llvm-svn: 195053
This change is incorrect. If you delete virtual destructor of both a base class
and a subclass, then the following code:
Base *foo = new Child();
delete foo;
will not cause the destructor for members of Child class. As a result, I observe
plently of memory leaks. Notable examples I investigated are:
ObjectBuffer and ObjectBufferStream, AttributeImpl and StringSAttributeImpl.
llvm-svn: 194997
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 194865
There is nothing special about quotes and newlines from the object
file point of view, only the assembler has to worry about expanding
the \n and \".
This patch then removes the special handling from the Mangler.
llvm-svn: 194667
Accepting quotes is a property of an assembler, not of an object file. For
example, ELF can support any names for sections and symbols, but the gnu
assembler only accepts quotes in some contexts and llvm-mc in a few more.
LLVM should not produce different symbols based on a guess about which assembler
will be reading the code it is printing.
llvm-svn: 194575
Objective-C data structures.
This is allows tools such as darwin's otool(1) that uses the
LLVM disassembler take a pointer value being loaded by
an instruction and add a comment to what it is being referenced
to make following disassembly of Objective-C programs
more readable.
For example disassembling the Mac OS X TextEdit app one
will see comments like the following:
movq 0x20684(%rip), %rsi ## Objc selector ref: standardUserDefaults
movq 0x21985(%rip), %rdi ## Objc class ref: _OBJC_CLASS_$_NSUserDefaults
movq 0x1d156(%rip), %r14 ## Objc message: +[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults]
leaq 0x23615(%rip), %rdx ## Objc cfstring ref: @"SelectLinePanel"
callq 0x10001386c ## Objc message: -[[%rdi super] initWithWindowNibName:]
These diffs also include putting quotes around C strings
in literal pools and uses "symbol address" in the comment
when adding a symbol name to the comment to tell these
types of references apart:
leaq 0x4f(%rip), %rax ## literal pool for: "Hello world"
movq 0x1c3ea(%rip), %rax ## literal pool symbol address: ___stack_chk_guard
Of course the easy changes are in the LLVM disassembler and
the hard work is up to the implementer of the SymbolLookUp()
call back.
rdar://10602439
llvm-svn: 193833
When assembling, a .thumb_func directive is supposed to be applicable to the
next symbol definition, even if there are intervening directives. We were
racing ahead to try and find it, and this commit should fix the issue.
Patch by Gabor Ballabas
llvm-svn: 193403
Also improve the implementation of EmitRawText(Twine) so it doesn't
bother using the SmallString buffer if the Twine is a simple StringRef
anyway.
llvm-svn: 193378
This is another (final?) stab at making us able to parse our own asm output
on Windows.
Symbols on Windows often contain @'s and ?'s in their names. Our asm parser
didn't like this. ?'s were not allowed, and @'s were intepreted as trying to
reference PLT/GOT/etc.
We can't just add quotes around the bad names, since e.g. for MinGW, we use gas
to assemble, and it doesn't like quotes in some places (notably in .def
directives).
This commit makes us allow ?'s in symbol names, and @'s in symbol names for MS
assembly.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1978
llvm-svn: 193000
This caused the clang-native-mingw32-win7 buildbot to break.
The assembler was complaining about the following lines that were showing up
in the asm for CrashRecoveryContext.cpp:
movl $"__ZL16ExceptionHandlerP19_EXCEPTION_POINTERS@4", 4(%eax)
calll "_AddVectoredExceptionHandler@8"
.def "__ZL16ExceptionHandlerP19_EXCEPTION_POINTERS@4";
"__ZL16ExceptionHandlerP19_EXCEPTION_POINTERS@4":
calll "_RemoveVectoredExceptionHandler@4"
Reverting for now.
llvm-svn: 192940
The reason this got reverted was that the @feat.00 symbol which was emitted
for every TU became quoted, and on cygwin/mingw we use the gas assembler which
couldn't handle the quotes.
This commit fixes the problem by only emitting @feat.00 for win32, where we use
clang -cc1as to assemble. gas would just drop this symbol anyway, so there is no
loss there.
With @feat.00 gone, there shouldn't be quoted symbols showing up on cygwin since
it uses the Itanium ABI, which doesn't put these funny characters in symbols.
> Because of win32 mangling, we produce symbol and section names with
> funny characters in them, most notably @ characters.
>
> MC would choke on trying to parse its own assembly output. This patch addresses
> that by:
>
> - Making @ trigger quoting of symbol names
> - Also quote section names in the same way
> - Just parse section names like other identifiers (to allow for quotes)
> - Don't assume @ signifies a symbol variant if it is in a string.
llvm-svn: 192859
This patch fixes a small mistake in MCDataAtom::addData() where it doesn't ever
call remap():
- if (Data.size() > Begin - End - 1)
+ if (Data.size() > End + 1 - Begin)
remap(Begin, End + 1);
This is currently not visible because of another bug is the disassembler, so
the patch includes a unit test.
Patch by Stephen Checkoway.
llvm-svn: 192823
GNU AS didn't like quotes in symbol names.
Error: junk at end of line, first unrecognized character is `"'
.def "@feat.00";
"@feat.00" = 1
Reproduced on Cygwin's 2.23.52.20130309 and mingw32's 2.20.1.20100303.
llvm-svn: 192775
Because of win32 mangling, we produce symbol and section names with
funny characters in them, most notably @ characters.
MC would choke on trying to parse its own assembly output. This patch addresses
that by:
- Making @ trigger quoting of symbol names
- Also quote section names in the same way
- Just parse section names like other identifiers (to allow for quotes)
- Don't assume @ signifies a symbol variant if it is in a string.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1945
llvm-svn: 192758
This can happen when processing command line arguments, which
are often stored as std::string's and later turned into
StringRef's via std::string::data(). Unfortunately this
is not guaranteed to return a null-terminated string
until C++11, causing breakage on platforms that don't do this.
llvm-svn: 192558
This patch fixes an old FIXME by creating a MCTargetStreamer interface
and moving the target specific functions for ARM, Mips and PPC to it.
The ARM streamer is still declared in a common place because it is
used from lib/CodeGen/ARMException.cpp, but the Mips and PPC are
completely hidden in the corresponding Target directories.
I will send an email to llvmdev with instructions on how to use this.
llvm-svn: 192181
When MC was first added, targets could use hasRawTextSupport to keep features
working before they were added to the MC interface.
The design goal of MC is to provide an uniform api for printing assembly and
object files. Short of relaxations and other corner cases, a object file is
just another representation of the assembly.
It was never the intention that targets would keep doing things like
if (hasRawTextSupport())
Set flags in one way.
else
Set flags in another way.
When they do that they create two code paths and the object file is no longer
just another representation of the assembly. This also then requires testing
with llc -filetype=obj, which is extremelly brittle.
This patch removes some of these hacks by replacing them with smaller ones.
The ARM flag setting is trivial, so I just moved it to the constructor. For
Mips, the patch adds two temporary hack directives that allow the assembly
to represent the same things as the object file was already able to.
The hope is that the mips developers will replace the hack directives with
the same ones that gas uses and drop the -print-hack-directives flag.
I will also try to implement a target streamer interface, so that we can
move this out of the common code.
In summary, for any new work, two rules of the thumb are
* Don't use "llc -filetype=obj" in tests.
* Don't add calls to hasRawTextSupport.
llvm-svn: 192035
This patch handles LLVM standalone assembler (llvm-mc) ELF flag setting based on input file
directive processing.
Mips assembly requires processing inline directives that directly and
indirectly affect the output ELF header flags. This patch handles one
".abicalls".
To process these directives we are following the model the code generator
uses by storing state in a container as we go through processing and when
we detect the end of input file processing, AsmParser is notified and we
update the ELF header flags through a MipsELFStreamer method with a call from
MCTargetAsmParser::emitEndOfAsmFile(MCStreamer &OutStreamer).
This patch will allow other targets the same functionality.
Jack
llvm-svn: 191982
itinerary model in case the target does not supply a scheduling model.
By doing this, targets like cortex-a8 can benefit from the latency printing
feature added in r191859.
This part of <rdar://problem/14687488>.
llvm-svn: 191916
classes that are marked as Variant as those require an MI to pass to
SubTargetInfo::resolveSchedClass.
This is part of <rdar://problem/14687488>.
llvm-svn: 191864
disassembled output alongside the instructions.
E.g., on a vector shuffle operation with a memory operand, disassembled
outputs are:
* Without the option:
vpshufd $-0x79, (%rsp), %xmm0
* With the option:
vpshufd $-0x79, (%rsp), %xmm0 ## Latency: 5
The printed latency is extracted from the schedule model available in the
disassembler context. Thus, this option has no effect if there is not a
scheduling model for the target.
This boils down to one may need to specify the CPU string, so that this
option could have an effect.
Note: Latency < 2 are not printed.
This part of <rdar://problem/14687488>.
llvm-svn: 191859
comments issued with verbose assembly.
E.g., on a vector shuffle operation, disassembled output are:
* Without the option:
vpshufd $-0x79, (%rsp), %xmm0
* With the option:
vpshufd $-0x79, (%rsp), %xmm0 ## xmm0 = mem[3,1,0,2]
This part of <rdar://problem/14687488>.
llvm-svn: 191799
CFE produces it to indicate artificial locations.
c.f.: DWARF standard, Table 6.2:
line -- An unsigned integer indicating a source line number. Lines are numbered beginning at 1. The compiler may emit the value 0 in cases where an instruction cannot be attributed to any source line.
llvm-svn: 191471
The binutils assembler supports a mode called DOLLAR_DOT which treats
the dollar sign token as a reference to the current program counter if
the dollar sign doesn't precede a constant or identifier.
This commit adds a new MCAsmInfo flag stating whether or not a given
target supports this interpretation of the dollar sign token; by
default, this flag is not enabled.
Further, enable this flag for PPC. The system assembler for AIX and
binutils both support using the dollar sign in this manner.
This fixes PR17353.
llvm-svn: 191368
The size of common symbols is now tracked correctly, so they can be listed in the arange section without needing knowledge of other following symbols.
.comm (and .lcomm) do not indicate to the system assembler any particular section to use, so we have to treat them as having no section.
Test case update to account for this.
llvm-svn: 191210
This makes using array_pod_sort significantly safer. The implementation relies
on function pointer casting but that should be safe as we're dealing with void*
here.
llvm-svn: 191175
Clean up some simple code quality issues. Bring internal naming
conventions up to current standard, fix inconsistent formatting, and
tidy up a couple of odd contructs.
llvm-svn: 191117
Summary:
We indicate that the object files are safe by emitting a @feat.00
absolute address symbol. The address is presumably interpreted as a
bitfield of features that the compiler would like to enable. Bit 0 is
documented in the PE COFF spec to opt in to "registered SEH", which is
what /safeseh enables.
LLVM's object files are safe by default because LLVM doesn't know how to
produce SEH handlers.
Reviewers: Bigcheese
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1691
llvm-svn: 190898
In particular, this means we emit non-external symbols defined to
variables, such as aliases or absolute addresses.
This is needed to implement /safeseh, and it appears there was some
confusion about what symbols to emit previously.
llvm-svn: 190888
Summary:
The '?' flag uses the last section group if the last had a section
group. We treat combining an explicit section group and the '?' as a
hard error.
This fixes PR17198.
Reviewers: rafael, bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1686
llvm-svn: 190768
For alignment purposes, the instruction array will always have an even
number of entries, with the final entry potentially unused (in which
case the array will be one longer than indicated by the count of unwind
codes field).
Reviewed by Anton Korobeynikov, Charles Davis and Nico Rieck.
llvm-svn: 190767
data structures.
The Win64 EH data structures must be of type IMAGE_REL_AMD64_ADDR32NB
instead of IMAGE_REL_AMD64_ADDR32. This is easiely achieved by adding
the VK_COFF_IMGREL32 modifier to the symbol reference.
Change also references to start and end of the SEH range of a function
as offsets to start of the function.
Reviewed by Jim Grosbach, Charles Davis and Nico Rieck.
llvm-svn: 190766
There are more than one paths to where the frame information is emitted. Place
the call to generateCompactUnwindEncodings() into the method which outputs the
frame information, thus ensuring that the encoding is there for every path. This
involved threading the MCAsmBackend object through to this method.
<rdar://problem/13623355>
llvm-svn: 190335
We used to generate the compact unwind encoding from the machine
instructions. However, this had the problem that if the user used `-save-temps'
or compiled their hand-written `.s' file (with CFI directives), we wouldn't
generate the compact unwind encoding.
Move the algorithm that generates the compact unwind encoding into the
MCAsmBackend. This way we can generate the encoding whether the code is from a
`.ll' or `.s' file.
<rdar://problem/13623355>
llvm-svn: 190290
with a debug build) with this buggy .indirect_symbol directive usage:
% cat test.s
x: .indirect_symbol _y
The assertion is because it is trying to get the symbol index for the
symbol _y when it is writing out the indirect symbol table. This line of
code in MachObjectWriter::WriteObject() :
Write32(Asm.getSymbolData(*it->Symbol).getIndex());
And while there is a symbol _y it does not have any getSymbolData set which
is only done in MachObjectWriter::BindIndirectSymbols() for pointer sections
or stub sections. I added a check and an error in there to catch this in case
something slips through.
But to get a better error the parser should detect when a .indirect_symbol
directive is used and it is not in a pointer section or stub section. To make
that work I moved the handling of the indirect symbol out of the target
independent AsmParser code into the DarwinAsmParser code that can check
for the proper Mach-O section types.
rdar://14825505
llvm-svn: 189497
Right now we have two headers for the Mach-O format. I'd like to get rid
of one. Since the other object formats are all in Support, I chose to
keep the Mach-O header in Support, and discard the other one.
llvm-svn: 189314
The code offset for unwind code SET_FPREG is wrong because it is set
to constant 0. The fix is to do the same as for the other unwind
codes: emit a label and later the absolute difference between the
label and the begin of the prologue.
Also enables the failing test case MC/COFF/seh.s
Reviewed by Jim Grosbach, Charles Davis and Nico Rieck.
llvm-svn: 189309
Like yaml ObjectFiles, this will be very useful for testing the MC CFG
implementation (mostly MCObjectDisassembler), by matching the output
with YAML, and for potential users of the MC CFG, by using it as an input.
There isn't much to the actual format, it is just a serialization of the
MCModule class. Of note:
- Basic block references (pred/succ, ..) are represented by the BB's
start address.
- Just as in the MC CFG, instructions are MCInsts with a size.
- Operands have a prefix representing the type (only register and
immediate supported here).
- Instruction opcodes are represented by their names; enum values aren't
stable, enum names mostly are: usually, a change to a name would need
lots of changes in the backend anyway.
Same with registers.
All in all, an example is better than 1000 words, here goes:
A simple binary:
Disassembly of section __TEXT,__text:
_main:
100000f9c: 48 8b 46 08 movq 8(%rsi), %rax
100000fa0: 0f be 00 movsbl (%rax), %eax
100000fa3: 3b 04 25 48 00 00 00 cmpl 72, %eax
100000faa: 0f 8c 07 00 00 00 jl 7 <.Lend>
100000fb0: 2b 04 25 48 00 00 00 subl 72, %eax
.Lend:
100000fb7: c3 ret
And the (pretty verbose) generated YAML:
---
Atoms:
- StartAddress: 0x0000000100000F9C
Size: 20
Type: Text
Content:
- Inst: MOV64rm
Size: 4
Ops: [ RRAX, RRSI, I1, R, I8, R ]
- Inst: MOVSX32rm8
Size: 3
Ops: [ REAX, RRAX, I1, R, I0, R ]
- Inst: CMP32rm
Size: 7
Ops: [ REAX, R, I1, R, I72, R ]
- Inst: JL_4
Size: 6
Ops: [ I7 ]
- StartAddress: 0x0000000100000FB0
Size: 7
Type: Text
Content:
- Inst: SUB32rm
Size: 7
Ops: [ REAX, REAX, R, I1, R, I72, R ]
- StartAddress: 0x0000000100000FB7
Size: 1
Type: Text
Content:
- Inst: RET
Size: 1
Ops: [ ]
Functions:
- Name: __text
BasicBlocks:
- Address: 0x0000000100000F9C
Preds: [ ]
Succs: [ 0x0000000100000FB7, 0x0000000100000FB0 ]
<snip>
...
llvm-svn: 188890
Supports:
- entrypoint, using LC_MAIN.
- static ctors/dtors, using __mod_{init,exit}_func
- translation between effective and object load address, using
dyld's VM address slide.
llvm-svn: 188886
It can now disassemble code in situations where the effective load
address is different than the load address declared in the object file.
This happens for PIC, hence "dynamic".
llvm-svn: 188884
This is the behavior of sequential disassemblers (llvm-objdump, ...),
when there is no instruction size hint (fixed-length, ...)
While there, also do some minor cleanup.
llvm-svn: 188883
When an MCTextAtom is split, all MCBasicBlocks backed by it are
automatically split, with a fallthrough between both blocks, and
the successors moved to the second block.
llvm-svn: 188881
It's useful to be able to write down floating-point numbers without having to
worry about what they'll be rounded to (as C99 discovered), this extends that
ability to the MC assembly parsers.
llvm-svn: 188370
Summary:
We need to do two things:
- Initialize BSSSection in MCObjectFileInfo::InitCOFFMCObjectFileInfo
- Teach TargetLoweringObjectFileCOFF::SelectSectionForGlobal what to do
with it
This fixes PR16861.
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1361
llvm-svn: 188244
Currently, when an invalid attribute is encountered on processing a .s file,
clang will abort due to llvm_unreachable. Invalid user input should not cause
an abnormal termination of the compiler. Change the interface to return a
boolean to indicate the failure as a first step towards improving hanlding of
malformed user input to clang.
Signed-off-by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
llvm-svn: 188047
* ELFTypes.h contains template magic for defining types based on endianess, size, and alignment.
* ELFFile.h defines the ELFFile class which provides low level ELF specific access.
* ELFObjectFile.h contains ELFObjectFile which uses ELFFile to implement the ObjectFile interface.
llvm-svn: 188022
This patch provides basic support for powerpc64le as an LLVM target.
However, use of this target will not actually generate little-endian
code. Instead, use of the target will cause the correct little-endian
built-in defines to be generated, so that code that tests for
__LITTLE_ENDIAN__, for example, will be correctly parsed for
syntax-only testing. Code generation will otherwise be the same as
powerpc64 (big-endian), for now.
The patch leaves open the possibility of creating a little-endian
PowerPC64 back end, but there is no immediate intent to create such a
thing.
The LLVM portions of this patch simply add ppc64le coverage everywhere
that ppc64 coverage currently exists. There is nothing of any import
worth testing until such time as little-endian code generation is
implemented. In the corresponding Clang patch, there is a new test
case variant to ensure that correct built-in defines for little-endian
code are generated.
llvm-svn: 187179
This is consistent with the ELF object writer.
Add some COFF tests that relocate against an alias.
Reviewers: espindola
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1079
llvm-svn: 186341
Patch from Игорь Пашев (I do hope we support utf-8 commit messages; I
also hope he'll forgive me for transliterating it as Igor Pashev in
case things go horribly wrong).
llvm-svn: 186034
In the commit message to r185476 I wrote:
>The PowerPC-specific modifiers VK_PPC_TLSGD and VK_PPC_TLSLD
>correspond exactly to the generic modifiers VK_TLSGD and VK_TLSLD.
>This causes some confusion with the asm parser, since VK_PPC_TLSGD
>is output as @tlsgd, which is then read back in as VK_TLSGD.
>
>To avoid this confusion, this patch removes the PowerPC-specific
>modifiers and uses the generic modifiers throughout. (The only
>drawback is that the generic modifiers are printed in upper case
>while the usual convention on PowerPC is to use lower-case modifiers.
>But this is just a cosmetic issue.)
This was unfortunately incorrect, there is is fact another,
serious drawback to using the default VK_TLSLD/VK_TLSGD
variant kinds: using these causes ELFObjectWriter::RelocNeedsGOT
to return true, which in turn causes the ELFObjectWriter to emit
an undefined reference to _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_.
This is a problem on powerpc64, because it uses the TOC instead
of the GOT, and the linker does not provide _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_,
so the symbol remains undefined. This means shared libraries
using TLS built with the integrated assembler are currently
broken.
While the whole RelocNeedsGOT / _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ situation
probably ought to be properly fixed at some point, for now I'm
simply reverting the r185476 commit. Now this in turn exposes
the breakage of handling @tlsgd/@tlsld in the asm parser that
this check-in was originally intended to fix.
To avoid this regression, I'm also adding a different fix for
this problem: while common code now parses @tlsgd as VK_TLSGD,
a special hack in the asm parser translates this code to the
platform-specific VK_PPC_TLSGD that the back-end now expects.
While this is not really pretty, it's self-contained and
shouldn't hurt anything else for now. One the underlying
problem is fixed, this hack can be reverted again.
llvm-svn: 185945
Obviously the personality function should be emitted as language handler
instead of the hard coded _GCC_specific_handler. The language specific
data must be placed after the unwind information therefore it must not
be emitted into a separate section.
Reviewed by Charles Davis and Nico Rieck.
llvm-svn: 185761
For alignment purposes, the instruction array will always have an even
number of entries, with the final entry potentially unused (in which
case the array will be one longer than indicated by the count of unwind
codes field).
Reviewed by Charles Davis and Nico Rieck.
llvm-svn: 185760
data structures.
The Win64 EH data structures must be of type IMAGE_REL_AMD64_ADDR32NB
instead of IMAGE_REL_AMD64_ADDR32. This is easiely achieved by adding
the VK_COFF_IMGREL32 modifier to the symbol reference.
Change also references to start and end of the SEH range of a function
as offsets to start of the function.
Reviewed by Charles Davis and Nico Rieck.
llvm-svn: 185759
The code offset for unwind code SET_FPREG is wrong because it is set
to constant 0. The fix is to do the same as for the other unwind
codes: emit a label and later the absolute difference between the
label and the begin of the prologue.
Also enables the failing test case MC/COFF/seh.s
Reviewed by Charles Davis and Nico Rieck.
llvm-svn: 185758
The PowerPC-specific modifiers VK_PPC_TLSGD and VK_PPC_TLSLD
correspond exactly to the generic modifiers VK_TLSGD and VK_TLSLD.
This causes some confusion with the asm parser, since VK_PPC_TLSGD
is output as @tlsgd, which is then read back in as VK_TLSGD.
To avoid this confusion, this patch removes the PowerPC-specific
modifiers and uses the generic modifiers throughout. (The only
drawback is that the generic modifiers are printed in upper case
while the usual convention on PowerPC is to use lower-case modifiers.
But this is just a cosmetic issue.)
llvm-svn: 185476
This is dead code since PIC16 was removed in 2010. The result was an odd mix,
where some parts would carefully pass it along and others would assert it was
zero (most of the object streamer for example).
llvm-svn: 185436
This adds support for TLS data relocations and modifiers:
.quad target@dtpmod
.quad target@tprel
.quad target@dtprel
Currently exploited by the asm parser only.
llvm-svn: 185394
that have been run through the 'C' pre-processor.
The implementation of SrcMgr.FindLineNumber() is slow but OK if
it uses its cache when called multiple times with an SMLoc that is
forward of the previous call.
In the case of generating dwarf for assembly source files that have
been run through the 'C' pre-processor we need to calculate the
logical line number based on the last parsed cpp hash file line
comment. And the current code calls SrcMgr.FindLineNumber()
twice to do this causing its cache not to work and results in very
slow compile times:
% time /Volumes/SandBox/build-llvm/Debug+Asserts/bin/llvm-mc -triple thumbv7-apple-ios -filetype=obj -o /tmp/x.o mscorlib.dll.E -g
672.542u 0.299s 11:13.15 99.9% 0+0k 0+2io 2106pf+0w
So we save the info from the last parsed cpp hash file line comment
to avoid making the second call to SrcMgr.FindLineNumber() most times
and end up with compile times like:
% time /Volumes/SandBox/build-llvm/Debug+Asserts/bin/llvm-mc -triple thumbv7-apple-ios -filetype=obj -o /tmp/x.o mscorlib.dll.E -g
3.404u 0.104s 0:03.80 92.1% 0+0k 0+3io 2105pf+0w
rdar://14156934
llvm-svn: 184592
The current code base only supports the minimum set of tls-related
relocations and @modifiers that are necessary to support compiler-
generated code. This patch extends this to the full set defined
in the ABI (and supported by the GNU assembler) for the benefit
of the assembler parser.
llvm-svn: 184551
This adds necessary infrastructure to support the @h modifier.
Note that all required relocation types were already present
(and unused).
This patch provides support for using @h in the assembler;
it would also be possible to now use this feature in code
generated by the compiler, but this is not done yet.
llvm-svn: 184548