Implement debug_loc.dwo, as well as llvm-dwarfdump support for dumping
this section.
Outlined in the DWARF5 spec and http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/DebugFission the
debug_loc.dwo section has more variation than the standard debug_loc,
allowing 3 different forms of entry (plus the end of list entry). GCC
seems to, and Clang certainly, only use one form, so I've just
implemented dumping support for that for now.
It wasn't immediately obvious that there was a good refactoring to share
the implementation of dumping support between debug_loc and
debug_loc.dwo, so they're separate for now - ideas welcome or I may come
back to it at some point.
As per a comment in the code, we could choose different forms that may
reduce the number of debug_addr entries we emit, but that will require
further study.
llvm-svn: 204697
No functional change intended.
Merging up-front rather than delaying this task until later. This just
seems simpler and more efficient (avoiding growing the debug loc list
only to have to skip over those post-merged entries, etc).
llvm-svn: 204679
Use the range machinery for DW_AT_ranges and DW_AT_high/lo_pc.
This commit moves us from a single range per subprogram to extending
ranges if we are:
a) In the same section, and
b) In the same enclosing CU.
This means we have more fine grained ranges for compile units, and fewer
ranges overall when we have multiple functions in the same CU
adjacent to each other in the object file.
Also remove all of the earlier hacks around this functionality for
function sections etc. Also update all of the testcases to take into
account the merging functionality.
with a fix for location entries in the debug_loc section:
Make sure that debug loc entries are relative to the low_pc
of the compile unit. This means that when we only have a single
range that the offset should be just relative to the low_pc
of the unit, for multiple ranges for a CU this means that we'll be
relative to 0 which we emit along with DW_AT_ranges.
This mostly shows up with linked binaries, so add a testcase with
multiple CUs so that our location is going to be offset of a CU
with a non-zero low_pc.
llvm-svn: 204377
This commit moves us from a single range per subprogram to extending
ranges if we are:
a) In the same section, and
b) In the same enclosing CU.
This means we have more fine grained ranges for compile units, and fewer
ranges overall when we have multiple functions in the same CU
adjacent to each other in the object file.
Also remove all of the earlier hacks around this functionality for
function sections etc. Also update all of the testcases to take into
account the merging functionality.
llvm-svn: 204277
This isn't a complete fix - it falls back to non-comp_dir when multiple
compile units are in play. Adding a map of comp_dir to table is part of
the more general solution, but I gave up (in the short term) when I
realized I'd also have to calculate the size of each type unit so as to
produce correct DW_AT_stmt_list attributes.
llvm-svn: 204202
This allows us to catch more opportunities for ODR-based type uniquing
during LTO.
Paired commit with CFE which updates some testcases to verify the new
DIBuilder behavior.
llvm-svn: 204106
This removes an attribute (and more importantly, a relocation) from
skeleton type units and removes some unnecessary file names from the
debug_line section that remains in the .o (and linked executable) file.
There's still a few places we could shave off some more space here:
* use compilation dir of the underlying compilation unit (since all the
type units share that compilation dir - though this would be more
complicated in LTO cases where they don't (keep a map of compilation
dir->line table header?))
* Remove some of the unnecessary header fields from the line table since
they're not needed in this situation (about 12 bytes per table).
llvm-svn: 204099
When emitting assembly there's no support for emitting separate line
tables for each compilation unit - so LLVM emits .loc directives
producing a single line table.
Line tables have an implicit directory (index 0) equal to the
compilation directory (DW_AT_comp_dir) of the compilation unit that
references them.
If multiple compilation units (with possibly disparate compilation
directories) reference the same line table, we must avoid relying on
this ambiguous directory.
Achieve this my simply not setting the compilation directory on the line
table when we're in this situation (multiple units while emitting
assembly).
llvm-svn: 204094
We still do a few lookups into the line table mapping in MCContext that
could be factored out into a single lookup (rather than looking it up
once for the table label, once to set the compilation unit, once for
each time we need a file ID, etc... ) but assembly output complicates
that somewhat as we still need a virtual dispatch back to the
MCAsmStreamer in that case.
llvm-svn: 204092
See r204027 for the precursor to this that applied to asm debug info.
This required some non-obvious API changes to handle the case of asm
output (we never go asm->asm so this didn't come up in r204027): the
modification of the file/directory name by MCDwarfLineTableHeader needed
to be reflected in the MCAsmStreamer caller so it could print the
appropriate .file directive, so those StringRef parameters are now
non-const ref (in/out) parameters rather than just const.
llvm-svn: 204069
based on the ODR.
This adds an OdrMemberMap to DwarfDebug which is used to unique C++
member function declarations based on the unique identifier of their
containing class and their mangled name.
We can't use the usual DIRef mechanism here because DIScopes are indexed
using their entire MDNode, including decl_file and decl_line, which need
not be unique (see testcase).
Prior to this change multiple redundant member function declarations would
end up in the same uniqued DW_TAG_class_type.
llvm-svn: 203982
I could fold the callers into their one call site, but the indirection
(given how verbose choosing the section is) seemed helpful.
The use of a member function pointer's a bit "tricky", but seems limited
enough, the call sites are simple/clean/clear, and there's only one use.
llvm-svn: 203619
First: refactor out the emission of entries into the .debug_loc section
into its own routine.
Second: add a new class ByteStreamer that can be used to either emit
using an AsmPrinter or hash using DIEHash the series of bytes that
would be emitted. Use this in all of the location emission routines
for the .debug_loc section.
No functional change intended outside of a few additional comments
in verbose assembly.
llvm-svn: 203304
This works by moving the existing code into the DIEValue hierarchy
and using the DwarfDebug pointer off of the AsmPrinter to access
any global information we need.
llvm-svn: 203033
This enables us to figure out where in the debug_loc section our
locations are so that we can eventually hash them. It also helps
remove some special case code in emission. No functional change.
llvm-svn: 203018
already lived there and it is where it belongs -- this is the in-memory
debug location representation.
This is just cleanup -- Modules can actually cope with this, but that
doesn't make it right. After chatting with folks that have out-of-tree
stuff, going ahead and moving the rest of the headers seems preferable.
llvm-svn: 202960
alongside DIEBlock and replace uses accordingly. Use DW_FORM_exprloc
in DWARF4 and later code. Update testcases.
Adding a DIELoc instead of using extra forms inside DIEBlock so
that we can keep location expressions separate from other uses. No
direct use at the moment, however, it's not a lot of code and
using a separately named class keeps it somewhat more obvious
what's going on in various locations.
llvm-svn: 201481
This broke in r185459 while TLS support was being generalized to handle
non-symbol TLS representations.
I thought about/tried having an enum rather than a bool to track the
TLS-ness of the address table entry, but namespaces and naming seemed
more hassle than it was worth for only one caller that needed to specify
this.
llvm-svn: 201469
code to see if we're emitting a function into a non-default
text section. This is still a less-than-ideal solution, but more
contained than r199871 to determine whether or not we're emitting
code into an array of comdat sections.
llvm-svn: 200269
compile unit. Make these relocations on the platforms that need
relocations and add a routine to ensure that we don't put the
addresses in an offset table for split dwarf.
llvm-svn: 199990
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
Since we'll now also need the split dwarf file name along with the
language in DwarfTypeUnits, just use the whole DICompileUnit rather than
explicitly handling each field needed.
llvm-svn: 198842
This reverts commit r198398, thus reapplying r198397.
I had accidentally introduced an endianness issue when applying the hash
to the type unit. Using support::ulittle64_t in the reinterpret_cast in
addDwarfTypeUnitType fixes this issue.
Original commit message:
Debug Info: Type Units: Simplify type hashing using IR-provided unique
names.
What's good for LTO metadata size problems ought to be good for non-LTO
debug info size too, so let's rely on the same uniqueness in both cases.
If it's insufficient for non-LTO for whatever reason (since we now won't
be uniquing CU-local types or any C types - but these are likely to not
be the most significant contributors to type bloat) we should consider a
frontend solution that'll help both LTO and non-LTO alike, rather than
using DWARF-level DIE-hashing that only helps non-LTO debug info size.
It's also much simpler this way and benefits C++ even more since we can
deduplicate lexically separate definitions of the same C++ type since
they have the same mangled name.
llvm-svn: 198436
What's good for LTO metadata size problems ought to be good for non-LTO
debug info size too, so let's rely on the same uniqueness in both cases.
If it's insufficient for non-LTO for whatever reason (since we now won't
be uniquing CU-local types or any C types - but these are likely to not
be the most significant contributors to type bloat) we should consider a
frontend solution that'll help both LTO and non-LTO alike, rather than
using DWARF-level DIE-hashing that only helps non-LTO debug info size.
It's also much simpler this way and benefits C++ even more since we can
deduplicate lexically separate definitions of the same C++ type since
they have the same mangled name.
llvm-svn: 198397