This is a followup to r222373. A better solution to the problem solved
there is to not create the leaked nodes at all (we know that they will
never be used for forward declared functions anyway). To avoid bot
breakage in the interval between the cfe and llvm commits, add a check
that the nMDNode is not null before deleting it. This code can completely
go away after the LLVM part is in.
llvm-svn: 222433
While emitting debug information for function forward decalrations, we
create DISubprogram objects that aran't stored in the AllSubprograms
list, and thus won't get finalized by the DIBuilder. During the DIBuilder
finalize(), the temporary MDNode allocated for the DISubprogram
Variables field gets RAUWd with a non temporary DIArray. For the forward
declarations, simply delete that temporary node before we delete the
parent node, so that it doesn't leak.
llvm-svn: 222373
Currently this function would return nothing for functions or globals that
haven't seen a definition yet. Make it return a forward declaration that will
get RAUWed with the definition if one is seen at a later point. The strategy
used to implement this is similar to what's done for types: the forward
declarations are stored in a vector and post processed upon finilization to
perform the required RAUWs.
For now the only user of getDeclarationOrDefinition() is EmitUsingDecl(), thus
this patch allows to emit correct imported declarations even in the absence of
an actual definition of the imported entity.
(Another user will be the debug info generation for argument default values
that I need to resurect).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6173
llvm-svn: 222220
So DWARF5 specs out auto deduced return types as DW_TAG_unspecified_type
with DW_AT_name "auto", and GCC implements this somewhat, but it
presents a few problems to do this with Clang.
GCC's implementation only applies to member functions where the auto
return type isn't deduced immediately (ie: member functions of templates
or member functions defined out of line). In the common case of an
inline deduced return type function, GCC emits the DW_AT_type as the
deduced return type.
Currently GDB doesn't seem to behave too well with this debug info - it
treats the return type as 'void', even though the definition of the
function has the correctly deduced return type (I guess it sees the
return type the declaration has, doesn't understand it, and assumes
void). This means the function's ABI might be broken (non-trivial return
types, etc), etc.
Clang, on the other hand doesn't track this particular case of a
deducable return type that is deduced immediately versus one that is
deduced 'later'. So if we implement the DWARF5 representation, all
deducible return type functions would get adverse GDB behavior
(including deduced return type lambda functions, inline deduced return
type functions, etc).
Also, we can't just do this for auto types that are not deduced -
because Clang marks even the declaration's return type as deduced (&
provides the underlying type) once a definition is seen that allows the
deduction. So we have to ignore even deduced types - but we can't do
that for auto variables (because this representation only applies to
function declarations - variables and function definitions need the real
type so the function can be called, etc) so we'd need to add an extra
flag to the type unwrapping/creation code to indicate when we want to
see through deduced types and when we don't. It's also not as simple as
just checking at the top level when building a function type (for one
thing, we reuse the function type building for building function pointer
types which might also have 'auto' in them - but be the type of a
variable instead) because the auto might be arbitrarily deeply nested
("auto &", "auto (*)()", etc...)
So, with all that said, let's do the simple thing that works in existing
debuggers for now and treat these functions the same way we do function
templates and implicit special members: omit them from the member list,
since they can't be correctly called anyway (without knowing the return
type the ABI isn't know and a function call could put the arguments in
the wrong place) so they're not much use to the user.
At some point in the future, when GDB understands the DWARF5
representation better it might be worth plumbing through the extra type
builder handling to avoid looking through AutoType for some callers,
etc...
llvm-svn: 221704
When we are generating the global initializer functions, we call
CGDebugInfo::EmitFunctionStart() with a valid decl which is describing
the initialized global variable. Do not update the DeclCache with this
key as it will overwrite the the cached variable DIGlobalVariable with
the newly created artificial DISubprogram.
One could wonder if we should put artificial subprograms in the DIE tree
at all (there are vaild uses for them carrying line information though).
llvm-svn: 221385
This fixes a corner-case where __uuidof as a template argument would
result in us trying to emit a GLValue as an RValue. This would lead to
a crash down the road.
llvm-svn: 220585
The previous IR representation used the non-lexical decl context, which
placed the definitions in the same scope as the declarations (ie: within
the class) - this was hidden by the fact that LLVM currently doesn't
respect the context of global variable definitions at all, and always
puts them at the top level (as direct children of the compile_unit).
Having the correct lexical scope improves source fidelity and simplify
backend global variable emission (with changes coming shortly).
Doing something similar for non-member global variables would help
simplify/cleanup things further (see FIXME in the commit) and provide
similar source fidelity benefits to the final debug info.
llvm-svn: 220488
Plumb through the full QualType of the TemplateArgument::Declaration, as
it's insufficient to only know whether the type is a reference or
pointer (that was necessary for mangling, but insufficient for debug
info). This shouldn't increase the size of TemplateArgument as
TemplateArgument::Integer is still longer by another 32 bits.
Several bits of code were testing that the reference-ness of the
parameters matched, but this seemed to be insufficient (various other
features of the type could've mismatched and wouldn't've been caught)
and unnecessary, at least insofar as removing those tests didn't cause
anything to fail.
(Richard - perchaps you can hypothesize why any of these checks might
need to test reference-ness of the parameters (& explain why
reference-ness is part of the mangling - I would've figured that for the
reference-ness to be different, a prior template argument would have to
be different). I'd be happy to add them in/beef them up and add test
cases if there's a reason for them)
llvm-svn: 219900
When lazily constructing static member variable declarations (when
the vtable optimization fires and the definition of the type is omitted
(or built later, lazily), but the out of line definition of the static
member is provided and must be described in debug info) ensure we use
the canonical declaration when computing the file, line, etc for that
declaration (rather than the definition, which is also a declaration,
but not the canonical one).
llvm-svn: 219736
By leaving these members out of the member list, we avoid them being
emitted into type unit definitions - while still allowing the
definition/declaration to be injected into the compile unit as expected.
llvm-svn: 219101
By leaving these members out of the member list, we avoid them being
emitted into type unit definitions - while still allowing the
definition/declaration to be injected into the compile unit as expected.
llvm-svn: 219100
Complex address expressions are no longer part of DIVariable, but
rather an extra argument to the debug intrinsics.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4919
rdar://problem/17994491
llvm-svn: 218788
Complex address expressions are no longer part of DIVariable, but
rather an extra argument to the debug intrinsics.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4919
rdar://problem/17994491
llvm-svn: 218777
Most of the debug info emission is powered essentially from function
definitions - if we emit the definition of a function, we emit the types
of its parameters, the members of those types, and so on and so forth.
For types that aren't referenced even indirectly due to this - because
they only appear in temporary expressions, not in any named variable, we
need to explicitly emit/add them as is done here. This is not the only
case of such code, and we might want to consider handling "void
func(void*); ... func(new T());" (currently debug info for T is not
emitted) at some point, though GCC doesn't. There's a much broader
solution to these issues, but it's a lot of work for possibly marginal
gain (but might help us improve the default -fno-standalone-debug
behavior to be even more aggressive in some places). See the original
review thread for more details.
Patch by jyoti allur (jyoti.yalamanchili@gmail.com)!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D2498
llvm-svn: 218390
Due to the possible presence of return-by-out parameters, using the LLVM
argument number count when numbering debug info arguments can end up
off-by-one. This could produce two arguments with the same number, which
would in turn cause LLVM to emit only one of those arguments (whichever
it found last) or assert (r215157).
llvm-svn: 215227
There are no vtable offset offsets in the MS ABI, but vbtable offsets
are analogous. There are no consumers of this information yet, but at
least we don't crash now.
llvm-svn: 215149
This reverts commit r215137.
This doesn't work at all, an offset-offset is probably different than an
offset. I'm scared that this passed our normal test suite.
llvm-svn: 215141
The MS ABI has a notion of 'required alignment' for fields; this
alignment supercedes pragma pack directives.
MSVC takes into account alignment attributes on typedefs when
determining whether or not a field has a certain required alignment.
Do the same in clang by tracking whether or not we saw such an attribute
when calculating the type's bitwidth and alignment.
This fixes PR20418.
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4714
llvm-svn: 214274
Summary:
This new debug emission kind supports emitting line location
information in all instructions, but stops code generation
from emitting debug info to the final output.
This mode is useful when the backend wants to track source
locations during code generation, but it does not want to
produce debug info. This is currently used by optimization
remarks (-Rpass, -Rpass-missed and -Rpass-analysis).
When one of the -Rpass flags is used, the front end will enable
location tracking, only if no other debug option is enabled.
To prevent debug information from being generated, a new debug
info kind LocTrackingOnly causes DIBuilder::createCompileUnit() to
not emit the llvm.dbg.cu annotation. This blocks final code generation
from generating debug info in the back end.
Depends on D4234.
Reviewers: echristo, dblaikie
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4235
llvm-svn: 211610
This looks like the right way for this check to work, but there is
another semi-obvious bug, I would think: why is CurLoc not zero'd out
between functions? The possibility for it to bleed between them seems
problematic. (& indeed I caused tests to fail when I fixed this a
different way, by setting CurLoc to SourceLocation() and the end of
EmitFunctionEnd... )
The changes to debug-info-blocks.m are due to a mismatch between the
source manager's file naming and CGDebugInfo's default handling when no
-main-file-name is specified. This actually reveals somewhat of a bug in
the debug info when using source files from standard in, too. See the
comment in CGDebugInfo::CreateCompileUnit for more details.
llvm-svn: 208742
While constructing ObjC Interface types we might create the declaration
of some normal C++ types, thus adding things to the ReplaceMap. Make
sure we process the ReplaceMap after the ObjC interfaces.
In theory we know at this point, since we're at the end of the TU, that
we won't be upgrading any declarations to definitions, so we could just
construct non-temporary nodes, but that would require extra state in
CGDebugInfo to conditionalize the creation of declaration nodes which
seems annoying/more work than is appropriate.
llvm-svn: 208226
Reverting r208106 to reapply r208065 with a fix for the regression. The
issue was that the enum tried to be built even if the declaration hadn't
been constructed for debug info - presenting problems for enum templates
and typedefs of enums with names for linkage purposes.
Original commit message:
This regressed a little further 208055 though it was already a little
broken.
While the requiresCompleteType optimization should be implemented here.
Future (possibly near future) work.
llvm-svn: 208114
This regressed a little further 208055 though it was already a little
broken.
While the requiresCompleteType optimization should be implemented here.
Future (possibly near future) work.
llvm-svn: 208065
CGDebugInfo and DIBuilder were lax in their handling of temporary
MDNodes. All temporary nodes need to be deleted, which means they need
to be RAUW'd with a permanent node. This was not happening.
To ensure this, leverage DIBuilder's new ability to create both
permanent and temporary declarations. Ensure all temporary declarations
are RAUW'd, even with itself. (DIDescriptor::RAUW handles the case where
it is replaced with itself and creates a new, duplicate permanent node
to replace itself with)
This means that all temporary declarations must be added to the
ReplacementMap even if they're never upgraded to definitions - so move
the point of insertion into the map to the point of creation of the
declarations.
llvm-svn: 208055
This takes a different approach than the
completedType/requiresCompleteType work which relies on AST callbacks to
upgrade the type declaration to a definition. Instead, just defer
constructing the definition to the end of the translation unit.
This works because the definition is never needed by other debug info
(so far as I know), whereas the definition of a struct may be needed by
other debug info before the end of the translation unit (such as
emitting the definition of a member function which must refer to that
member function's declaration).
If we had a callback for whenever an IVar was added to an ObjC interface
we could use that, and remove the need for the ObjCInterfaceCache, which
might be nice. (also would need a callback for when it was more than
just a declaration so we could get properties, etc).
A side benefit is that we also don't need the CompletedTypeCache
anymore. Just rely on the declaration-ness of a type to decide whether
its definition is yet to be emitted.
There's still the PR19562 memory leak, but this should hopefully make
that a bit easier to approach.
llvm-svn: 208015
Items were being redundantly added to the replacement map (both when the
declaration was created, and then again when its definition was
constructed) which caused extra handling to be required when walking the
map (as elements may've already been replaced due to prior entries). By
avoiding adding the duplicates, the checks in the replacement handling
can be replaced with assertions.
llvm-svn: 208000
parts of Clang. I don't really have any opinion about whether using that
macro is good or bad, but its odd that this is the only one, and Eric
seemed happy with just nuking it for now.
llvm-svn: 206806
specializations collect all arguments and not just the ones from the
class template partial specialization from which this class template
specialization was instantiated. The debug info does not represent the
partial specialization otherwise and so specialized parameters would
go missing.
rdar://problem/16636569.
llvm-svn: 206430
are not associated with any source lines.
Previously, if the Location of a Decl was empty, EmitFunctionStart would
just keep using CurLoc, which would sometimes be correct (e.g., thunks)
but in other cases would just point to a hilariously random location.
This patch fixes this by completely eliminating all uses of CurLoc from
EmitFunctionStart and rather have clients explicitly pass in a
SourceLocation for the function header and the function body.
rdar://problem/14985269
llvm-svn: 205999
sure that a debugger can find them when stepping through code,
for example from the included testcase:
12 int test_it() {
13 c = 1;
14 d = 2;
-> 15 a = 4;
16 return (c == 1);
17 }
18
(lldb) p a
(int) $0 = 2
(lldb) p c
(int) $1 = 2
(lldb) p d
(int) $2 = 2
and a, c, d are all part of the file static anonymous union:
static union {
int c;
int d;
union {
int a;
};
struct {
int b;
};
};
Fixes PR19221.
llvm-svn: 205952
We already got the type alias correct (though I've included a test case
here) since Clang represents that like any other typedef - but type
alias templates weren't being handled.
llvm-svn: 205691
While the folding set would deduplicate the nodes themselves and LLVM
would handle not emitting the same global twice, it still meant creating
a long/redundant list of global variables.
llvm-svn: 205668
See the comment for CodeGenFunction::tryEmitAsConstant that describes
how in some contexts (lambdas) we must not emit references to the
variable, but instead use the constant directly - because of this we end
up emitting a constant for the variable, as well as emitting the
variable itself.
Should we just skip putting the variable on the stack at all and omit
the debug info for the constant? It's not clear to me - what if the
address of the local is taken?
llvm-svn: 205651
This was committed 4 years ago in 108916 with insufficient testing to
explain why the "getTypeAsWritten" case was appropriate. Experience says
that it isn't - the presence or absence of an explicit instantiation
declaration was causing this code to generate either i<int> or i<int,
int>.
That didn't seem to be a useful distinction, and omitting the template
arguments was destructive to debuggers being able to associate the two
types across translation units or across compilers (GCC, reasonably,
never omitted the arguments).
llvm-svn: 205447
We don't want to encourage the code to emit a lexical block for
a function that needs one in order for the line table to change,
we need to grab the line information from the body of the pattern
that we were instantiated from, this code should do that.
Modify the test case to ensure that we're still looking in the
right place for all of the scopes and also that we haven't
created a lexical block where we didn't need one.
llvm-svn: 205368
instead of rolling an inefficient version of the function. This
changes some order of emission of metadata nodes, fix up those
testcases and make them more flexible to some changes.
llvm-svn: 204874
location that the next call emitLocation() would default to. Otherwise
setLocation() may wrongly believe that the current source file didn't
change, when in fact it did.
llvm-svn: 204517
This fails an "isa<> used with null pointer" assert during a clang-cl
self-host on Windows. This was caused by r202769, and I'm currently
reducing a test case.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2944
llvm-svn: 202888
We should only have this optimization fire when the explicit
instantiation definition would cause at least one member function to be
emitted, thus ensuring that even a compiler not performing this
optimization would still emit the full type information elsewhere.
But we should also pessimize output still by always emitting the
definition when the explicit instantiation definition appears so that at
some point in the future we can depend on that information even when no
code had to be emitted in that TU. (this shouldn't happen very often,
since people mostly use explicit spec decl/defs to reduce code size -
but perhaps one day they could use it to explicitly reduce debug info
size too)
This was worth about 2% for Clang and LLVM - so not a huge win, but a
win. It looks really great for simple STL programs (include <string> and
just declare a string - 14k -> 1.4k of .dwo)
llvm-svn: 202769