We add a map in DwarfDebug to map MDNodes that are shareable across CUs to the
corresponding DIEs: MDTypeNodeToDieMap. These DIEs can be shared across CUs,
that is why we keep the maps in DwarfDebug instead of CompileUnit.
We make the assumption that if a DIE is not added to an owner yet, we assume
it belongs to the current CU. Since DIEs for the type system are added to
their owners immediately after creation, and other DIEs belong to the current
CU, the assumption should be true.
A testing case is added to show that we only create a single DIE for a type
MDNode and we use ref_addr to refer to the type DIE.
We also add a testing case to show ref_addr relocations for non-darwin
platforms.
llvm-svn: 193779
To support ref_addr, we calculate the section offset of a DIE (i.e. offset
of a DIE from beginning of the debug info section). The Offset field in DIE
is currently CU-relative. To calculate the section offset, we add a
DebugInfoOffset field in CompileUnit to store the offset of a CU from beginning
of the debug info section. We set the value in DwarfUnits::computeSizeAndOffset
for each CompileUnit.
A helper function DIE::getCompileUnit is added to return the CU DIE that
the input DIE belongs to. We also add a map CUDieMap in DwarfDebug to help
finding the CU for a given CU DIE.
For a cross-referenced DIE, we first find the CU DIE it belongs to with
getCompileUnit, then we use CUDieMap to get the corresponding CU for the CU DIE.
Adding the section offset of the CU with the CU-relative offset of a DIE gives
us the seciton offset of the DIE.
We correctly emit ref_addr with relocation using EmitLabelPlusOffset when
doesDwarfUseRelocationsAcrossSections is true.
This commit handles the emission of DW_FORM_ref_addr when we have an attribute
with FORM_ref_addr. A follow-on patch will start using ref_addr when adding a
DIEEntry. This commit will be tested and verified in the follow-on patch.
Reviewed off-list by Eric, Thanks.
llvm-svn: 193658
This allows various variables to be more self-documenting and easier to
debug by being of specific types without overlapping enum values.
Precommit review by Eric Christopher.
llvm-svn: 193091
DIE::addChild had a shortcircuit that silently no-op'd when a child was
readded to the same parent. This hid some quirky/redundant code in
DwarfDebug/CompileUnit. By removing that functionality and replacing it
with an assert I was able to find and cleanup those cases, mostly
centering around adding members to types in various circumstances.
1) The original oddity I noticed while working on type units (which
actually was helping me in the short term, by accident) was the
addToContextOwner call in constructTypeDIE. This call was completely
bogus (why was it only done for non-virtual types? what relevance does
that have at all) and redundant with the more uniform addToContextOwner
made in getOrCreateTypeDIE.
2) If a member function definition was visited (createSubprogramDIE), it
would attempt to build the member function declaration. The declaration
DIE would then be added to its context, but in building the context (the
type for which this function is a member) the members of the type would
be added to the type automatically, so by the time the context was
constructed, the member function was already associated with it.
3) The same as (2) but without the member function being constructed
first. Whenever a type was constructed, the members would be created and
member functions would be created by getOrCreateSubprogramDIE - this
would lead to the subprogram being added to the (incomplete) type
already, then the general member-construction code would add it again.
llvm-svn: 191928
and it is shared across CUs.
We add a few maps in DwarfDebug to map MDNodes for the type system to the
corresponding DIEs: MDTypeNodeToDieMap, MDSPNodeToDieMap, and
MDStaticMemberNodeToDieMap. These DIEs can be shared across CUs, that is why we
keep the maps in DwarfDebug instead of CompileUnit.
Sometimes, when we try to add an attribute to a DIE, the DIE is not yet added
to its owner yet, so we don't know whether we should use ref_addr or ref4.
We create a worklist that will be processed during finalization to add
attributes with the correct form (ref_addr or ref4).
We add addDIEEntry to DwarfDebug to be a wrapper around DIE->addValue. It checks
whether we know the correct form, if not, we update the worklist
(DIEEntryWorklist).
A testing case is added to show that we only create a single DIE for a type
MDNode and we use ref_addr to refer to the type DIE.
llvm-svn: 191792
type units.
Initially this support is used in the computation of an ODR checker
for C++. For now we're attaching it to the DIE, but in the future
it will be attached to the type unit.
This also starts breaking out types into the separation for type
units, but without actually splitting the DIEs.
In preparation for hashing the DIEs this adds a DIEString type
that contains a StringRef with the string contained at the label.
llvm-svn: 187213
Correctly handles ref_addr depending on the Dwarf version. Emit Dwarf with
version from module flag.
TODO: turn on/off features depending on the Dwarf version.
llvm-svn: 185484
This partially reverts r185202 and restores DIELabel to hold plain
MCSymbol references. Instead, we add a new subclass DIEExpr of
DIEValue that can hold generic MCExpr references.
This is in preparation for supporting debug info for TLS variables
on PowerPC, where we need to describe the variable location using
a more complex expression than just MCSymbolRefExpr.
llvm-svn: 185458
There is a difference for FORM_ref_addr between DWARF 2 and DWARF 3+.
Since Eric is against guarding DWARF 2 ref_addr with DarwinGDBCompat, we are
still in discussion on how to handle this.
The correct solution is to update our header to say version 4 instead of version
2 and update tool chains as well.
rdar://problem/13559431
llvm-svn: 178806
the target system.
It was hard-coded to 4 bytes before. I can't get llvm to generate a
ref_addr on a reasonably sized testing case.
rdar://problem/13559431
llvm-svn: 178722
belongs to a different compile unit.
DW_FORM_ref_addr should be used for cross compile-unit reference.
When compiling a large application, we got a dwarfdump verification error where
abstract_origin points to nowhere.
This error can't be reproduced on any testing case in MultiSource.
We may have other cases where we use DW_FORM_ref4 unconditionally.
rdar://problem/13370501
llvm-svn: 176882
POD-like anyway, so we don't even care about calling their d'tors (DIEBlock
being the exception).
~6% less mallocs and ~1% compile time improvement on clang -O0 -g oggenc.c
llvm-svn: 100035