Previously it was impossible to distinguish between "There is
no PDB implementation for this platform" and "I tried to load
the PDB, but couldn't find the file", making it hard to figure
out if you built llvm-pdbdump incorrectly or if you just mistyped
a file name.
This patch adds proper error handling so that we can know exactly
what went wrong.
llvm-svn: 230868
This class is responsible for getting the linked data to the
disk in the appropriate form. Today it it an empty shell that
just instantiates an MC layer.
As we do not put anything in the resulting file yet, we just
check it has the right architecture (and check that -o does
the right thing).
To be able to create all the components, this commit adds a
few dependencies to llvm-dsymutil, namely all-targets, MC and
AsmPrinter.
Also add a -no-output option, so that tests that do not need
the binary result can continue to run even if they do not have
the required target linked in.
llvm-svn: 230824
...and reimplement DwarfLinker::reportWarning in terms of it. Other
compenents than the DwarfLinker will need to report warnings, and I'm
about to add a similar "error()" helper at the same global level so
make that consistent.
llvm-svn: 230820
Function pointers were not correctly handled by the dumper, and
they would print as "* name". They now print as
"int (__cdecl *name)(int arg1, int arg2)" as they should.
Also, doubles were being printed as floats. This fixes that bug
as well, and adds tests for all builtin types. as well as a test
for function pointers.
llvm-svn: 230703
The gold plugin never calls MaterializeModule, so any old debug info
was not deleted and could cause crashes.
Now that it is being "upgraded", the plugin also has to handle warnings
and create Modules with a nice id (it shows in the warning).
llvm-svn: 230655
Since r199356, we've printed a warning when dropping debug info.
r225562 started crashing on that, since it registered a diagnostic
handler that only expected errors. This fixes the handler to expect
other severities. As a side effect, it now prints "error: " at the
start of error messages, similar to `llvm-as`.
There was a testcase for r199356, but it only really checked the
assembler. Move `test/Bitcode/drop-debug-info.ll` to `test/Assembler`,
and introduce `test/Bitcode/drop-debug-info.3.5.ll` (and companion
`.bc`) to test the bitcode reader.
Note: tools/gold/gold-plugin.cpp has an equivalent bug, but I'm not sure
what the best fix is there. I'll file a PR.
llvm-svn: 230416
Like r230414, add bitcode support including backwards compatibility, for
an explicit type parameter to GEP.
At the suggestion of Duncan I tried coalescing the two older bitcodes into a
single new bitcode, though I did hit a wrinkle: I couldn't figure out how to
create an explicit abbreviation for a record with a variable number of
arguments (the indicies to the gep). This means the discriminator between
inbounds and non-inbounds gep is a full variable-length field I believe? Is my
understanding correct? Is there a way to create such an abbreviation? Should I
just use two bitcodes as before?
Reviewers: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7736
llvm-svn: 230415
This reverts commit r230062.
Debian stable (wheezy) ships still with cmake 2.8.9.
The commit broke my LLVM/Polly buildbot, to my knowledge our only Linux+cmake
buildbot.
llvm-svn: 230343
When debugging LTO issues with ld64, we use -save-temps to save the merged
optimized bitcode file, then invoke ld64 again on the single bitcode file to
speed up debugging code generation passes and ld64 stuff after code generation.
llvm linking a single bitcode file via lto_codegen_add_module will generate a
different bitcode file from the single input. With the newly-added
lto_codegen_set_module, we can make sure the destination module is the same as
the input.
lto_codegen_set_module will transfer the ownship of the module to code
generator.
rdar://19024554
llvm-svn: 230290
When multiple regions start on the same line, llvm-cov was just
showing the count of the last one as the line count. This can be
confusing and misleading for things like one-liner loops, where the
count at the end isn't very interesting, or even "if" statements with
an opening brace at the end of the line.
Instead, use the maximum of all of the region start counts.
llvm-svn: 230263
This adds the --class-definitions flag. If specified, when dumping
types, instead of "class Foo" you will see the full class definition,
with member functions, constructors, access specifiers.
NOTE: Using this option can be very slow, as generating a full class
definition requires accessing many different parts of the PDB.
llvm-svn: 230203
This increases the flexibility of how to dump different
symbol types -- necessary for context-sensitive formatting of
symbol types -- and also improves the modularity by allowing
the dumping to be implemented in the actual dumper, as opposed
to in the PDB library.
llvm-svn: 230184
This removes a wealth of options, and instead now only provides
three options. -symbols, -types, and -compilands. This greatly
simplifies use of the tool, and makes it easier to understand
what you're going to see when you run the tool.
llvm-svn: 230182
This will help us study the format of individual symbol
records more closely.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7664
Reviewed by: Timur Iskhodzhanov
llvm-svn: 229730
with the Mach-O S_LITERAL_POINTERS section type.
Also fix the printing of the leading addresses for literal sections to be consistent and
not print the 0x prefix. Updated test cases to match.
llvm-svn: 229548
a gold binary explicitly. Substitute this binary into the tests rather
than just directly executing the 'ld' binary.
This should allow folks to inject a cross compiling gold binary, or in
my case to use a gold binary built and installed somewhere other than
/usr/bin/ld. It should also allow the tests to find 'ld.gold' so that
things work even if gold isn't the default on the system.
I've only stubbed out support in the makefile to preserve the existing
behavior with none of the fancy logic. If someone else wants to add
logic here, they're welcome to do so.
llvm-svn: 229251
This code didn't really make sense as is. If a filename is passed in,
the user obviously wants the coverage *for that file*, not *for
everything*.
llvm-svn: 229217
PR22575 occurred because we were unsafely storing references into a
std::vector. If the vector moved because it grew, we'd be left
iterating through garbage memory. This avoids the issue by simplifying
the logic to gather coverage information as we go, rather than storing
it and iterating over it.
I'm relying on the existing tests showing that this is semantically
NFC, since it's difficult to hit the issue this fixes without
relatively large covered programs.
llvm-svn: 229215
Now that llgo ships its own go command we can rely on it having support for $GCCGO.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7628
llvm-svn: 229210
With this commit, llvm-dsymutil learns how to choose which DIEs
it will link in the final output and which ones it won't. This
is based on the 'valid relocation' information that has been
built in the previous commits.
The test only tests that we choose the right 'root DIEs'. The
selection algorithm (and especially the part that walk the
dependencies of a root DIE) lacks a bit test coverage. This
will be much easier to cover when we output actual Dwarf and
thus can use llvm-dwarfdump to verify the structure of the
emitted DIE trees. I'll add more tests then.
llvm-svn: 229183
These 'valid relocations' in the debug_info section will be how
dsymutil identifies the DIEs it needs to keep in the linked debug
information.
llvm-svn: 229178
because I didn't have binutils set up properly to build the gold plugin.
Fixes PR22581 which was filed because this broke the build for folks
relying on the plugin. Very sorry! =]
I've gotten the plugin stuff building now as well so it shouldn't keep
happening.
llvm-svn: 229156
LLVM's include tree and the use of using declarations to hide the
'legacy' namespace for the old pass manager.
This undoes the primary modules-hostile change I made to keep
out-of-tree targets building. I sent an email inquiring about whether
this would be reasonable to do at this phase and people seemed fine with
it, so making it a reality. This should allow us to start bootstrapping
with modules to a certain extent along with making it easier to mix and
match headers in general.
The updates to any code for users of LLVM are very mechanical. Switch
from including "llvm/PassManager.h" to "llvm/IR/LegacyPassManager.h".
Qualify the types which now produce compile errors with "legacy::". The
most common ones are "PassManager", "PassManagerBase", and
"FunctionPassManager".
llvm-svn: 229094
In particular this patch adds the ability to dump complete
function signature information including argument types as
correctly formatted strings. A side effect of this is that
almost all symbol and meta types are now formatted.
llvm-svn: 229076
Frequently you only want to iterate over children of a specific
type (e.g. functions). Previously you would get back a generic
interface that allowed iteration over the base symbol type,
which you would have to dyn_cast<> each one of. With this patch,
we allow the user to specify the concrete type as a template
parameter, and it will return an iterator which returns instances
of the concrete type directly.
llvm-svn: 228960
bfd creates the output file early, so calling exit(0) is not enough, the file needs to be explicitly deleted.
Patch by: H.J. Lu <hjl.tools@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 228946
Summary:
Move calls to get_input_file and release_input_file out of
getModuleForFile(). Otherwise release_input_file may end up
unmapping a view of the file while the view is still being
used by the Module (on 32-bit hosts).
Fix for PR22482.
Test Plan: Add test using --no-map-whole-files.
Reviewers: rafael, nlewycky
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7539
llvm-svn: 228842
This makes llvm-pdbdump available on all platforms, although it
will currently fail to create a dumper if there is no PDB reader
implementation for the current platform.
It implements dumping of compilands and children, which is less
information than was previously available, but it has to be
rewritten from scratch using the new set of interfaces, so the
rest of the functionality will be added back in subsequent commits.
llvm-svn: 228755
lto_codegen_compile_optimized. Also add lto_api_version.
Before this commit, we can only dump the optimized bitcode after running
lto_codegen_compile, but it includes some impacts of running codegen passes,
one example is StackProtector pass. We will get assertion failure when running
llc on the optimized bitcode, because StackProtector is effectively run twice.
After splitting lto_codegen_compile, the linker can choose to dump the bitcode
before running lto_codegen_compile_optimized.
lto_api_version is added so ld64 can check for runtime-availability of the new
API.
rdar://19565500
llvm-svn: 228000
terms of the new pass manager's TargetIRAnalysis.
Yep, this is one of the nicer bits of the new pass manager's design.
Passes can in many cases operate in a vacuum and so we can just nest
things when convenient. This is particularly convenient here as I can
now consolidate all of the TargetMachine logic on this analysis.
The most important change here is that this pushes the function we need
TTI for all the way into the TargetMachine, and re-creates the TTI
object for each function rather than re-using it for each function.
We're now prepared to teach the targets to produce function-specific TTI
objects with specific subtargets cached, etc.
One piece of feedback I'd love here is whether its worth renaming any of
this stuff. None of the names really seem that awesome to me at this
point, but TargetTransformInfoWrapperPass is particularly ... odd.
TargetIRAnalysisWrapper might make more sense. I would want to do that
rename separately anyways, but let me know what you think.
llvm-svn: 227731
This should be sufficient to replace the initial (minor) function pass
pipeline in Clang with the new pass manager. I'll probably add an (off
by default) flag to do that just to ensure we can get extra testing.
llvm-svn: 227726
I've added RUN lines both to the basic test for EarlyCSE and the
target-specific test, as this serves as a nice test that the TTI layer
in the new pass manager is in fact working well.
llvm-svn: 227725
produce it.
This adds a function to the TargetMachine that produces this analysis
via a callback for each function. This in turn faves the way to produce
a *different* TTI per-function with the correct subtarget cached.
I've also done the necessary wiring in the opt tool to thread the target
machine down and make it available to the pass registry so that we can
construct this analysis from a target machine when available.
llvm-svn: 227721
live in a class.
While this isn't really significant right now, I need to expose some
state to the pass construction expressions, and making them get
evaluated within a class context is a nice way to collect members that
they may need to access.
llvm-svn: 227715
base which it adds a single analysis pass to, to instead return the type
erased TargetTransformInfo object constructed for that TargetMachine.
This removes all of the pass variants for TTI. There is now a single TTI
*pass* in the Analysis layer. All of the Analysis <-> Target
communication is through the TTI's type erased interface itself. While
the diff is large here, it is nothing more that code motion to make
types available in a header file for use in a different source file
within each target.
I've tried to keep all the doxygen comments and file boilerplate in line
with this move, but let me know if I missed anything.
With this in place, the next step to making TTI work with the new pass
manager is to introduce a really simple new-style analysis that produces
a TTI object via a callback into this routine on the target machine.
Once we have that, we'll have the building blocks necessary to accept
a function argument as well.
llvm-svn: 227685
type erased interface and a single analysis pass rather than an
extremely complex analysis group.
The end result is that the TTI analysis can contain a type erased
implementation that supports the polymorphic TTI interface. We can build
one from a target-specific implementation or from a dummy one in the IR.
I've also factored all of the code into "mix-in"-able base classes,
including CRTP base classes to facilitate calling back up to the most
specialized form when delegating horizontally across the surface. These
aren't as clean as I would like and I'm planning to work on cleaning
some of this up, but I wanted to start by putting into the right form.
There are a number of reasons for this change, and this particular
design. The first and foremost reason is that an analysis group is
complete overkill, and the chaining delegation strategy was so opaque,
confusing, and high overhead that TTI was suffering greatly for it.
Several of the TTI functions had failed to be implemented in all places
because of the chaining-based delegation making there be no checking of
this. A few other functions were implemented with incorrect delegation.
The message to me was very clear working on this -- the delegation and
analysis group structure was too confusing to be useful here.
The other reason of course is that this is *much* more natural fit for
the new pass manager. This will lay the ground work for a type-erased
per-function info object that can look up the correct subtarget and even
cache it.
Yet another benefit is that this will significantly simplify the
interaction of the pass managers and the TargetMachine. See the future
work below.
The downside of this change is that it is very, very verbose. I'm going
to work to improve that, but it is somewhat an implementation necessity
in C++ to do type erasure. =/ I discussed this design really extensively
with Eric and Hal prior to going down this path, and afterward showed
them the result. No one was really thrilled with it, but there doesn't
seem to be a substantially better alternative. Using a base class and
virtual method dispatch would make the code much shorter, but as
discussed in the update to the programmer's manual and elsewhere,
a polymorphic interface feels like the more principled approach even if
this is perhaps the least compelling example of it. ;]
Ultimately, there is still a lot more to be done here, but this was the
huge chunk that I couldn't really split things out of because this was
the interface change to TTI. I've tried to minimize all the other parts
of this. The follow up work should include at least:
1) Improving the TargetMachine interface by having it directly return
a TTI object. Because we have a non-pass object with value semantics
and an internal type erasure mechanism, we can narrow the interface
of the TargetMachine to *just* do what we need: build and return
a TTI object that we can then insert into the pass pipeline.
2) Make the TTI object be fully specialized for a particular function.
This will include splitting off a minimal form of it which is
sufficient for the inliner and the old pass manager.
3) Add a new pass manager analysis which produces TTI objects from the
target machine for each function. This may actually be done as part
of #2 in order to use the new analysis to implement #2.
4) Work on narrowing the API between TTI and the targets so that it is
easier to understand and less verbose to type erase.
5) Work on narrowing the API between TTI and its clients so that it is
easier to understand and less verbose to forward.
6) Try to improve the CRTP-based delegation. I feel like this code is
just a bit messy and exacerbating the complexity of implementing
the TTI in each target.
Many thanks to Eric and Hal for their help here. I ended up blocked on
this somewhat more abruptly than I expected, and so I appreciate getting
it sorted out very quickly.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7293
llvm-svn: 227669
segname,sectname to specify a Mach-O section to print. The printing is based on
the section type or section attributes.
The printing of the module initialization and termination section types is printed
with this change. Printing of other section types will be added next.
llvm-svn: 227649
In preparation for adding PDB support to LLVM, this moves the
DWARF parsing code to its own subdirectory under DebugInfo, and
renames LLVMDebugInfo to LLVMDebugInfoDWARF.
This is purely a mechanical / build system change.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7269
Reviewed by: Eric Christopher
llvm-svn: 227586
Certain aspects of llvm-pdbdump require language support only present in
MSVC 2013 and higher. Since this is strictly a utility, and since we hope
to drop support for MSVC 2012 soon, don't build this unless MSVC 2013 or
higher.
llvm-svn: 227479
If the personality is not a recognized MSVC personality function, this
pass delegates to the dwarf EH preparation pass. This chaining supports
people on *-windows-itanium or *-windows-gnu targets.
Currently this recognizes some personalities used by MSVC and turns
resume instructions into traps to avoid link errors. Even if cleanups
are not used in the source program, LLVM requires the frontend to emit a
code path that resumes unwinding after an exception. Clang does this,
and we get unreachable resume instructions. PR20300 covers cleaning up
these unreachable calls to resume.
Reviewers: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7216
llvm-svn: 227405
The libDebugInfo DIE parsing doesn't store these relationships, we have to
recompute them. This commit introduces the CompileUnit bookkeeping class to
store this data. It will be expanded with more fields in the future.
No tests as this produces no visible output.
llvm-svn: 227382
It's an empty shell for now. It's main method just opens the debug
map objects and parses their Dwarf info. Test that we at least do
that correctly.
llvm-svn: 227337
Summary:
MetadataAsValue uses a canonical format that strips the MDNode if it
contains only a single constant value. This triggers an assertion when
trying to cast the value to a MDNode.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7165
llvm-svn: 227319
This adds two command line options:
--symbols dumps a list of all symbols found in the PDB.
--symbol-details dumps the same list, but with detailed information
for every symbol such as type, attributes, etc.
llvm-svn: 227286
This adds two command line options to llvm-pdbdump.
--source-files prints a flat list of all source files in the PDB.
--compilands prints a list of all compilands (e.g. object files)
that the PDB knows about, and for each one, a list of
source files that the compiland is composed of as well
as a hash of the original source file.
llvm-svn: 227276
PDB stores some of its data in streams and some in tables.
This patch teaches llvm-pdbdump to dump basic summary data
for the debug tables.
In support of this, this patch also adds some DIA helper
classes, such as a wrapper around an IDiaSymbol interface,
as well as helpers for outputting various enumerations to
a raw_ostream.
llvm-svn: 227257
llvm-pdbdump is a tool which can be used to dump the contents
of Microsoft-generated PDB files. It makes use of the Microsoft
DIA SDK, which is a COM based library designed specifically for
this purpose.
The initial commit of this tool dumps the raw bytes from PDB data
streams. Future commits will dump more semantic information such
as types, symbols, source files, etc similar to the types of
information accessible via llvm-dwarfdump.
Reviewed by: Aaron Ballman, Reid Kleckner, Chandler Carruth
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7153
llvm-svn: 227241
derived classes.
Since global data alignment, layout, and mangling is often based on the
DataLayout, move it to the TargetMachine. This ensures that global
data is going to be layed out and mangled consistently if the subtarget
changes on a per function basis. Prior to this all targets(*) have
had subtarget dependent code moved out and onto the TargetMachine.
*One target hasn't been migrated as part of this change: R600. The
R600 port has, as a subtarget feature, the size of pointers and
this affects global data layout. I've currently hacked in a FIXME
to enable progress, but the port needs to be updated to either pass
the 64-bitness to the TargetMachine, or fix the DataLayout to
avoid subtarget dependent features.
llvm-svn: 227113
MIPS64 ELF file has a very specific relocation record format. Each
record might specify up to three relocation operations. So the `r_info`
field in fact consists of three relocation type sub-fields and optional
code of "special" symbols.
http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/manuals/4000/007-4658-001/pdf/007-4658-001.pdf
page 40
The patch implements support of the MIPS64 relocation record format in
yaml2obj/obj2yaml tools by introducing new optional Relocation fields:
Type2, Type3, and SpecSym. These fields are recognized only if the
object/YAML file relates to the MIPS64 target.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7136
llvm-svn: 227044
This just lifts the logic into a static helper function, sinks the
legacy pass to be a trivial wrapper of that helper fuction, and adds
a trivial wrapper for the new PM as well. Not much to see here.
I switched a test case to run in both modes, but we have to strip the
dead prototypes separately as that pass isn't in the new pass manager
(yet).
llvm-svn: 226999
This is exciting as this is a much more involved port. This is
a complex, existing transformation pass. All of the core logic is shared
between both old and new pass managers. Only the access to the analyses
is separate because the actual techniques are separate. This also uses
a bunch of different and interesting analyses and is the first time
where we need to use an analysis across an IR layer.
This also paves the way to expose instcombine utility functions. I've
got a static function that implements the core pass logic over
a function which might be mildly interesting, but more interesting is
likely exposing a routine which just uses instructions *already in* the
worklist and combines until empty.
I've switched one of my favorite instcombine tests to run with both as
well to make sure this keeps working.
llvm-svn: 226987
manager to support the actual uses of it. =]
When I ported instcombine to the new pass manager I discover that it
didn't work because TLI wasn't available in the right places. This is
a somewhat surprising and/or subtle aspect of the new pass manager
design that came up before but I think is useful to be reminded of:
While the new pass manager *allows* a function pass to query a module
analysis, it requires that the module analysis is already run and cached
prior to the function pass manager starting up, possibly with
a 'require<foo>' style utility in the pass pipeline. This is an
intentional hurdle because using a module analysis from a function pass
*requires* that the module analysis is run prior to entering the
function pass manager. Otherwise the other functions in the module could
be in who-knows-what state, etc.
A somewhat surprising consequence of this design decision (at least to
me) is that you have to design a function pass that leverages
a module analysis to do so as an optional feature. Even if that means
your function pass does no work in the absence of the module analysis,
you have to handle that possibility and remain conservatively correct.
This is a natural consequence of things being able to invalidate the
module analysis and us being unable to re-run it. And it's a generally
good thing because it lets us reorder passes arbitrarily without
breaking correctness, etc.
This ends up causing problems in one case. What if we have a module
analysis that is *definitionally* impossible to invalidate. In the
places this might come up, the analysis is usually also definitionally
trivial to run even while other transformation passes run on the module,
regardless of the state of anything. And so, it follows that it is
natural to have a hard requirement on such analyses from a function
pass.
It turns out, that TargetLibraryInfo is just such an analysis, and
InstCombine has a hard requirement on it.
The approach I've taken here is to produce an analysis that models this
flexibility by making it both a module and a function analysis. This
exposes the fact that it is in fact safe to compute at any point. We can
even make it a valid CGSCC analysis at some point if that is useful.
However, we don't want to have a copy of the actual target library info
state for each function! This state is specific to the triple. The
somewhat direct and blunt approach here is to turn TLI into a pimpl,
with the state and mutators in the implementation class and the query
routines primarily in the wrapper. Then the analysis can lazily
construct and cache the implementations, keyed on the triple, and
on-demand produce wrappers of them for each function.
One minor annoyance is that we will end up with a wrapper for each
function in the module. While this is a bit wasteful (one pointer per
function) it seems tolerable. And it has the advantage of ensuring that
we pay the absolute minimum synchronization cost to access this
information should we end up with a nice parallel function pass manager
in the future. We could look into trying to mark when analysis results
are especially cheap to recompute and more eagerly GC-ing the cached
results, or we could look at supporting a variant of analyses whose
results are specifically *not* cached and expected to just be used and
discarded by the consumer. Either way, these seem like incremental
enhancements that should happen when we start profiling the memory and
CPU usage of the new pass manager and not before.
The other minor annoyance is that if we end up using the TLI in both
a module pass and a function pass, those will be produced by two
separate analyses, and thus will point to separate copies of the
implementation state. While a minor issue, I dislike this and would like
to find a way to cleanly allow a single analysis instance to be used
across multiple IR unit managers. But I don't have a good solution to
this today, and I don't want to hold up all of the work waiting to come
up with one. This too seems like a reasonable thing to incrementally
improve later.
llvm-svn: 226981
This patch adds a new set of JIT APIs to LLVM. The aim of these new APIs is to
cleanly support a wider range of JIT use cases in LLVM, and encourage the
development and contribution of re-usable infrastructure for LLVM JIT use-cases.
These APIs are intended to live alongside the MCJIT APIs, and should not affect
existing clients.
Included in this patch:
1) New headers in include/llvm/ExecutionEngine/Orc that provide a set of
components for building JIT infrastructure.
Implementation code for these headers lives in lib/ExecutionEngine/Orc.
2) A prototype re-implementation of MCJIT (OrcMCJITReplacement) built out of the
new components.
3) Minor changes to RTDyldMemoryManager needed to support the new components.
These changes should not impact existing clients.
4) A new flag for lli, -use-orcmcjit, which will cause lli to use the
OrcMCJITReplacement class as its underlying execution engine, rather than
MCJIT itself.
Tests to follow shortly.
Special thanks to Michael Ilseman, Pete Cooper, David Blaikie, Eric Christopher,
Justin Bogner, and Jim Grosbach for extensive feedback and discussion.
llvm-svn: 226940
I had already factored this analysis specifically to enable doing this,
but hadn't actually committed the necessary wiring to get at this from
the new pass manager. This also nicely shows how the separate cache
object can be directly managed by the new pass manager.
This analysis didn't have any direct tests and so I've added a printer
pass and a boring test case. I chose to print the i1 value which is
being assumed rather than the call to llvm.assume as that seems much
more useful for testing... but suggestions on an even better printing
strategy welcome. My main goal was to make sure things actually work. =]
llvm-svn: 226868
Summary:
The default copy and assignment operators for these objects probably don't actually do what the clients intend, so they should be deleted.
Places using the assignment operator to set the value of an option should cast to the option's data type first to call into the override for operator=. Places using the copy constructor just need to be changed to not copy (i.e. passing by const reference instead of value).
Reviewers: dexonsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7114
llvm-svn: 226762
pass and a LoopPrinterPass with the expected associated wiring.
I've added a RUN line to the only test case (!!!) we have that actually
prints loops. Everything seems to be working.
This is somewhat exciting as this is the first analysis using another
analysis to go in for the new pass manager. =D I also believe it is the
last analysis necessary for porting instcombine, but of course I may yet
discover more.
llvm-svn: 226560
Add an additional based relocation to the enumeration of based relocation names.
The lack of the enumerator value causes issues when inspecting WoA binaries.
llvm-svn: 226314
TargetLibraryAnalysis pass.
There are actually no direct tests of this already in the tree. I've
added the most basic test that the pass manager bits themselves work,
and the TLI object produced will be tested by an upcoming patches as
they port passes which rely on TLI.
This is starting to point out the awkwardness of the invalidate API --
it seems poorly fitting on the *result* object. I suspect I will change
it to live on the analysis instead, but that's not for this change, and
I'd rather have a few more passes ported in order to have more
experience with how this plays out.
I believe there is only one more analysis required in order to start
porting instcombine. =]
llvm-svn: 226160
The pass is really just a means of accessing a cached instance of the
TargetLibraryInfo object, and this way we can re-use that object for the
new pass manager as its result.
Lots of delta, but nothing interesting happening here. This is the
common pattern that is developing to allow analyses to live in both the
old and new pass manager -- a wrapper pass in the old pass manager
emulates the separation intrinsic to the new pass manager between the
result and pass for analyses.
llvm-svn: 226157
While the term "Target" is in the name, it doesn't really have to do
with the LLVM Target library -- this isn't an abstraction which LLVM
targets generally need to implement or extend. It has much more to do
with modeling the various runtime libraries on different OSes and with
different runtime environments. The "target" in this sense is the more
general sense of a target of cross compilation.
This is in preparation for porting this analysis to the new pass
manager.
No functionality changed, and updates inbound for Clang and Polly.
llvm-svn: 226078
This can happen if:
* It is present in a comdat in one file.
* It is not present in the comdat of the file that is kept.
* Is is not used.
This should fix the LTO boostrap.
Thanks to Takumi NAKAMURA for setting up the bot!
llvm-svn: 225983
utils/sort_includes.py.
I clearly haven't done this in a while, so more changed than usual. This
even uncovered a missing include from the InstrProf library that I've
added. No functionality changed here, just mechanical cleanup of the
include order.
llvm-svn: 225974
This adds the domtree analysis to the new pass manager. The analysis
returns the same DominatorTree result entity used by the old pass
manager and essentially all of the code is shared. We just have
different boilerplate for running and printing the analysis.
I've converted one test to run in both modes just to make sure this is
exercised while both are live in the tree.
llvm-svn: 225969
and expose the necessary hooks in the API directly.
This makes it much cleaner for example to log the usage of a pass
manager from a library. It also makes it more obvious that this
functionality isn't "optional" or "asserts-only" for the pass manager.
llvm-svn: 225841
template.
This consolidates three copies of nearly the same core logic. It adds
"complexity" to the ModuleAnalysisManager in that it makes it possible
to share a ModuleAnalysisManager across multiple modules... But it does
so by deleting *all of the code*, so I'm OK with that. This will
naturally make fixing bugs in this code much simpler, etc.
The only down side here is that we have to use 'typename' and 'this->'
in various places, and the implementation is lifted into the header.
I'll take that for the code size reduction.
The convenient names are still typedef-ed and used throughout so that
users can largely ignore this aspect of the implementation.
The follow-up change to this will do the exact same refactoring for the
PassManagers. =D
It turns out that the interesting different code is almost entirely in
the adaptors. At the end, that should be essentially all that is left.
llvm-svn: 225757
The bitcode reading interface used std::error_code to report an error to the
callers and it is the callers job to print diagnostics.
This is not ideal for error handling or diagnostic reporting:
* For error handling, all that the callers care about is 3 possibilities:
* It worked
* The bitcode file is corrupted/invalid.
* The file is not bitcode at all.
* For diagnostic, it is user friendly to include far more information
about the invalid case so the user can find out what is wrong with the
bitcode file. This comes up, for example, when a developer introduces a
bug while extending the format.
The compromise we had was to have a lot of error codes.
With this patch we use the DiagnosticHandler to communicate with the
human and std::error_code to communicate with the caller.
This allows us to have far fewer error codes and adds the infrastructure to
print better diagnostics. This is so because the diagnostics are printed when
he issue is found. The code that detected the problem in alive in the stack and
can pass down as much context as needed. As an example the patch updates
test/Bitcode/invalid.ll.
Using a DiagnosticHandler also moves the fatal/non-fatal error decision to the
caller. A simple one like llvm-dis can just use fatal errors. The gold plugin
needs a bit more complex treatment because of being passed non-bitcode files. An
hypothetical interactive tool would make all bitcode errors non-fatal.
llvm-svn: 225562
This reverts commit r225498 (but leaves r225499, which was a worthy
cleanup).
My plan was to change `DEBUG_LOC` to store the `MDNode` directly rather
than its operands (patch was to go out this morning), but on reflection
it's not clear that it's strictly better. (I had missed that the
current code is unlikely to emit the `MDNode` at all.)
Conflicts:
lib/Bitcode/Reader/BitcodeReader.cpp (due to r225499)
llvm-svn: 225531
options other than just -disassemble so that universal files can be used with other
options combined with -arch options.
No functional change to existing options and use. One test case added for the
additional functionality with a universal file an a -arch option.
llvm-svn: 225383
requiring and invalidating specific analyses. Also make their printed
names match their class names. Writing these out as prose really doesn't
make sense to me any more.
llvm-svn: 225346
Use this to test that path of invalidation. This test actually shows
redundant invalidation here that is really bad. I'm going to work on
fixing that next, but wanted to commit the test harness now that its all
working.
llvm-svn: 225257
remove an extra, redundant pass manager wrapping every run.
I had kept seeing these when manually testing, but it was getting really
annoying and was going to cause problems with overly eager invalidation.
The root cause was an overly complex and unnecessary pile of code for
parsing the outer layer of the pass pipeline. We can instead delegate
most of this to the recursive pipeline parsing.
I've added some somewhat more basic and precise tests to catch this.
llvm-svn: 225253
a specific analysis result.
This is quite handy to test things, and will also likely be very useful
for debugging issues. You could narrow down pass validation failures by
walking these invalidate pass runs up and down the pass pipeline, etc.
I've added support to the pass pipeline parsing to be able to create one
of these for any analysis pass desired.
Just adding this class uncovered one latent bug where the
AnalysisManager CRTP base class had a hard-coded Module type rather than
using IRUnitT.
I've also added tests for invalidation and caching of analyses in
a basic way across all the pass managers. These in turn uncovered two
more bugs where we failed to correctly invalidate an analysis -- its
results were invalidated but the key for re-running the pass was never
cleared and so it was never re-run. Quite nasty. I'm very glad to debug
this here rather than with a full system.
Also, yes, the naming here is horrid. I'm going to update some of the
names to be slightly less awful shortly. But really, I've no "good"
ideas for naming. I'll be satisfied if I can get it to "not bad".
llvm-svn: 225246
more verbose than I'd like, but the code really isn't that interesting,
and this still seems vastly simpler than any other solutions I've come
up with. =] Maybe if we get to the 10th IR unit, this will be a problem
in practice.
llvm-svn: 225245
manager tests to use them and be significantly more comprehensive.
This, naturally, uncovered a bug where the CGSCC pass manager wasn't
printing analyses when they were run.
The only remaining core manipulator is I think an invalidate pass
similar to the require pass. That'll be next. =]
llvm-svn: 225240
simplify things. This will become more important as I add no-op analyses
that want to re-use the logic we already have for analyses in the
registry. For now, no functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 225238
a normal interface for it in Passes.h.
This gives us essentially a single interface for running pass managers
which are provided from the bottom of the LLVM stack through interfaces
at the top of the LLVM stack that populate them with all of the
different analyses available throughout. It also means there is a single
blob of code that needs to include all of the pass headers and needs to
deal with the registry of passes and parsing names.
No functionality changed intended, should just be cleanup.
llvm-svn: 225237
is a no-op other than requiring some analysis results be available.
This can be used in real pass pipelines to force the usually lazy
analysis running to eagerly compute something at a specific point, and
it can be used to test the pass manager infrastructure (my primary use
at the moment).
I've also added bit of pipeline parsing magic to support generating
these directly from the opt command so that you can directly use these
when debugging your analysis. The syntax is:
require<analysis-name>
This can be used at any level of the pass manager. For example:
cgscc(function(require<my-analysis>,no-op-function))
This would produce a no-op function pass requiring my-analysis, followed
by a fully no-op function pass, both of these in a function pass manager
which is nested inside of a bottom-up CGSCC pass manager which is in the
top-level (implicit) module pass manager.
I have zero attachment to the particular syntax I'm using here. Consider
it a straw man for use while I'm testing and fleshing things out.
Suggestions for better syntax welcome, and I'll update everything based
on any consensus that develops.
I've used this new functionality to more directly test the analysis
printing rather than relying on the cgscc pass manager running an
analysis for me. This is still minimally tested because I need to have
analyses to run first! ;] That patch is next, but wanted to keep this
one separate for easier review and discussion.
llvm-svn: 225236
This object is meant to own the ObjectFiles and their underlying
MemoryBuffer. It is basically the equivalent of an OwningBinary
except that it efficiently handles Archives. It is optimized for
efficiently providing mappings of members of the same archive when
they are opened successively (which is standard in Darwin debug
maps, objects from the same archive will be contiguous).
Of course, the BinaryHolder will also be used by the DWARF linker
once it is commited, but for now only the debug map parser uses it.
With this change, you can run llvm-dsymutil on your Darwin debug build
of clang and get a complete debug map for it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6690
llvm-svn: 225207
units.
This was debated back and forth a bunch, but using references is now
clearly cleaner. Of all the code written using pointers thus far, in
only one place did it really make more sense to have a pointer. In most
cases, this just removes immediate dereferencing from the code. I think
it is much better to get errors on null IR units earlier, potentially
at compile time, than to delay it.
Most notably, the legacy pass manager uses references for its routines
and so as more and more code works with both, the use of pointers was
likely to become really annoying. I noticed this when I ported the
domtree analysis over and wrote the entire thing with references only to
have it fail to compile. =/ It seemed better to switch now than to
delay. We can, of course, revisit this is we learn that references are
really problematic in the API.
llvm-svn: 225145
The required functionality has been there for some time, but I never
managed to actually wire it into the command line registry of passes.
Let's do that.
llvm-svn: 225144
For this to work, we have to encode it in the build variables and use it
from llvm-config.cpp. I've tried to do this reasonably cleanly, but the
code for llvm-config.cpp is pretty strange. However, with this,
llvm-config stops giving the wrong answer when using LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX.
Note that the configure+make build just sets this to an empty string as
that build system has zero support for multilib of any form. I'm not
planning to add support there either, but this should leave a path for
anyone that wanted to.
llvm-svn: 224921
*numerous* places where it was missing in the CMake build. The primary
change here is that the suffix is now actually used for all of the lib
directories in the LLVM project's CMake. The various subprojects still
need similar treatment.
This is the first of a series of commits to try to make LLVM's cmake
effective in a multilib Linux installation. I don't think many people
are seriously using this variable so I'm hoping the fallout will be
minimal. A somewhat unfortunate consequence of the nature of these
commits is that until I land all of them, they will in part make the
brokenness of our multilib support more apparant. At the end, things
should actually work.
llvm-svn: 224919
Export symbols in libLTO.dylib for the local context-related functions
added in r221733 (`LTO_API_VERSION=11`)... and add the missing
definition for `lto_codegen_create_in_local_context()`.
llvm-svn: 224567
Summary: We should only have llvm-c-test use libLLVM if the library is built with the default set of components or if LLVM_DYLIB_COMPONENTS includes all the LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS required for llvm-c-test. Making libLLVM always used causes build failures if libLLVM doesn't include all
Reviewers: chapuni, ributzka
Reviewed By: ributzka
Subscribers: ributzka, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6668
llvm-svn: 224541
Also corrected the name of the load command to not end in an ’S’ as well as corrected
the name of the MachO::linker_option_command struct and other places that had the
word option as plural which did not match the Mac OS X headers.
llvm-svn: 224485
Add coverage in `llvm-lto` for the API exposed by libLTO to create
modules in local contexts.
The goal here isn't to test the symbol-related API extensively, just to
confirm that these modules work at all. (I'll be shifting code around
soon that should be NFC and I realized there was no test coverage.)
llvm-svn: 224408
The line mapping information for dynamic code is reported incorrectly. It causes VTune to map LLVM generated code to source lines incorrectly. This patch fix this issue.
Patch by Denis Pravdin.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6603
llvm-svn: 224229
The goal of this tool is to replicate Darwin's dsymutil functionality
based on LLVM. dsymutil is a DWARF linker. Darwin's linker (ld64) does
not link the debug information, it leaves it in the object files in
relocatable form, but embbeds a `debug map` into the executable that
describes where to find the debug information and how to relocate it.
When releasing/archiving a binary, dsymutil is called to link all the DWARF
information into a `dsym bundle` that can distributed/stored along with
the binary.
With this commit, the LLVM based dsymutil is just able to parse the STABS
debug maps embedded by ld64 in linked binaries (and not all of them, for
example archives aren't supported yet).
Note that the tool directory is called dsymutil, but the executable is
currently called llvm-dsymutil. This discrepancy will disappear once the
tool will be feature complete. At this point the executable will be renamed
to dsymutil, but until then you do not want it to override the system one.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6242
llvm-svn: 224134
In release builds this is actually possible as without asserts there is
no testing of the actual read bytes and the variables could be partially
uninitialized.
llvm-svn: 224114
This reflects the typelessness of `Metadata` in the bitcode format,
removing types from all metadata operands.
`METADATA_VALUE` represents a `ValueAsMetadata`, and always has two
fields: the type and the value.
`METADATA_NODE` represents an `MDNode`, and unlike `METADATA_OLD_NODE`,
doesn't store types. It stores operands at their ID+1 so that `0` can
reference `nullptr` operands.
Part of PR21532.
llvm-svn: 224073
The complicated situation is when we have to keep an alias but drop a GV
that is part of the aliasee.
We used to clone the dropped GV and make the clone internal. This is wasteful
as we know the original will be dropped.
With this patch what is done instead is set the linkage of the original to
internal and replace all uses (but the one in the alias) with a new
declaration that takes the name of the old GV. This saves us from having
to copy the body.
llvm-svn: 223863
Summary:
This is desirable for WebKit and other clients of the llvm-shlib because C++ exit time destructors have a tendency to crash when invoked from multi-threaded applications.
Ideally this option will be temporary, because the ideal fix is to just not have exit time destructors.
Reviewers: chapuni, ributzka
Reviewed By: ributzka
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6572
llvm-svn: 223805
The goal of this tool is to replicate Darwin's dsymutil functionality
based on LLVM. dsymutil is a DWARF linker. Darwin's linker (ld64) does
not link the debug information, it leaves it in the object files in
relocatable form, but embbeds a `debug map` into the executable that
describes where to find the debug information and how to relocate it.
When releasing/archiving a binary, dsymutil is called to link all the DWARF
information into a `dsym bundle` that can distributed/stored along with
the binary.
With this commit, the LLVM based dsymutil is just able to parse the STABS
debug maps embedded by ld64 in linked binaries (and not all of them, for
example archives aren't supported yet).
Note that the tool directory is called dsymutil, but the executable is
currently called llvm-dsymutil. This discrepancy will disappear once the
tool will be feature complete. At this point the executable will be renamed
to dsymutil, but until then you do not want it to override the system one.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6242
llvm-svn: 223793
This allows it to work with non trivial manglings like the one in COFF.
Amusingly, this can be tested with gold, as emit-llvm causes the plugin to
exit before any COFF is generated.
llvm-svn: 223790
Instead, walk the obj symbol list in parallel to find the GV. This shouldn't
change anything on ELF where global symbols are not mangled, but it is a step
toward supporting other object formats.
Gold itself is ELF only, but bfd ld supports COFF and the logic in the gold
plugin could be reused on lld.
llvm-svn: 223780
with fixes. Includes the move of tests for llvm-objdump for universal files to an X86
directory. And the fix where it was failing on linux Rafael tracked down with asan.
I had both Jim Grosbach and Adam Hemet look over the second fix since I could not
set up asan to reproduce with the old version but not with the fix.
llvm-svn: 223416
Summary: Add rpath load command support in Mach-O object and update llvm-objdump to use it.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6512
llvm-svn: 223343
Patch by Ben Gamari!
This redefines the `prefix` attribute introduced previously and
introduces a `prologue` attribute. There are a two primary usecases
that these attributes aim to serve,
1. Function prologue sigils
2. Function hot-patching: Enable the user to insert `nop` operations
at the beginning of the function which can later be safely replaced
with a call to some instrumentation facility
3. Runtime metadata: Allow a compiler to insert data for use by the
runtime during execution. GHC is one example of a compiler that
needs this functionality for its tables-next-to-code functionality.
Previously `prefix` served cases (1) and (2) quite well by allowing the user
to introduce arbitrary data at the entrypoint but before the function
body. Case (3), however, was poorly handled by this approach as it
required that prefix data was valid executable code.
Here we redefine the notion of prefix data to instead be data which
occurs immediately before the function entrypoint (i.e. the symbol
address). Since prefix data now occurs before the function entrypoint,
there is no need for the data to be valid code.
The previous notion of prefix data now goes under the name "prologue
data" to emphasize its duality with the function epilogue.
The intention here is to handle cases (1) and (2) with prologue data and
case (3) with prefix data.
References
----------
This idea arose out of discussions[1] with Reid Kleckner in response to a
proposal to introduce the notion of symbol offsets to enable handling of
case (3).
[1] http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2014-May/073235.html
Test Plan: testsuite
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6454
llvm-svn: 223189
llvm-objdump printed out an error message for this off-by-one error,
but because it always exits with 0 whether or not it found an error,
the test (llvm-objdump/coff-many-relocs.test) succeeded.
I made llvm-objdump exit with EXIT_FAILURE when an error is found.
llvm-svn: 222852
Previously, when loading an object file, RuntimeDyld (1) took ownership of the
ObjectFile instance (and associated MemoryBuffer), (2) potentially modified the
object in-place, and (3) returned an ObjectImage that managed ownership of the
now-modified object and provided some convenience methods. This scheme accreted
over several years as features were tacked on to RuntimeDyld, and was both
unintuitive and unsafe (See e.g. http://llvm.org/PR20722).
This patch fixes the issue by removing all ownership and in-place modification
of object files from RuntimeDyld. Existing behavior, including debugger
registration, is preserved.
Noteworthy changes include:
(1) ObjectFile instances are now passed to RuntimeDyld by const-ref.
(2) The ObjectImage and ObjectBuffer classes have been removed entirely, they
existed to model ownership within RuntimeDyld, and so are no longer needed.
(3) RuntimeDyld::loadObject now returns an instance of a new class,
RuntimeDyld::LoadedObjectInfo, which can be used to construct a modified
object suitable for registration with the debugger, following the existing
debugger registration scheme.
(4) The JITRegistrar class has been removed, and the GDBRegistrar class has been
re-written as a JITEventListener.
This should fix http://llvm.org/PR20722 .
llvm-svn: 222810
Fix ARMAttributeParser::CPU_arch_profile so that it doesn't switch on the value
'0' as a legal value of this build attribute.
Change-Id: Ie05a08900a82bb10b78c841b437df747ce3bb38e
llvm-svn: 222743
Having two ways to do this doesn't seem terribly helpful and
consistently using the insert version (which we already has) seems like
it'll make the code easier to understand to anyone working with standard
data structures. (I also updated many references to the Entry's
key and value to use first() and second instead of getKey{Data,Length,}
and get/setValue - for similar consistency)
Also removes the GetOrCreateValue functions so there's less surface area
to StringMap to fix/improve/change/accommodate move semantics, etc.
llvm-svn: 222319
StringSet is still a bit dodgy in that it exposes the raw iterator of
the StringMap parent, which exposes the weird detail that StringSet
actually has a 'value'... but anyway, this is useful for a handful of
clients that want to reference the newly inserted/persistent string data
in the StringSet/Map/Entry/thing.
llvm-svn: 222302
It printed out base relocation table header as table entry.
This patch also makes llvm-readobj to not skip ABSOLUTE entries
becuase it was confusing.
llvm-svn: 222299
We were a little lax in a few areas:
- We pretended that import libraries were like any old COFF file, they
are not. In fact, they aren't really COFF files at all, we should
probably grow some specialized functionality to handle them smarter.
- Our symbol iterators were more than happy to attempt to go past the
end of the symbol table if you had a symbol with a bad list of
auxiliary symbols.
llvm-svn: 222124
While this program worked correctly with small example programs, larger
ones tickled this bug. I'm working on a reduction because my program is
quite large.
llvm-svn: 222078
FYI, removed the unused MCInstrAnalysis as it does not exist for 64-bit ARM and
was causing a “couldn't initialize disassembler for target” error.
llvm-svn: 222045
This reverts commit r221842 which was a revert of r221836 and of the
test parts of r221837.
This new version fixes an UB bug pointed out by David (along with
addressing some other review comments), makes some dumping more
resilient to broken input data and forces the accelerator tables
to be dumped in the tests where we use them (this decision is
platform specific otherwise).
llvm-svn: 222003
In support of serializing executables, obj2yaml now records the virtual address
and size of sections. It also serializes whatever we strictly need from
the PE header, it expects that it can reconstitute everything else via
inference.
yaml2obj can reconstitute a fully linked executable.
In order to get executables correctly serialized/deserialized, other
bugs were fixed as a circumstance. We now properly respect file and
section alignments. We also avoid writing out string tables unless they
are strictly necessary.
llvm-svn: 221975
This teaches CoverageMapping::getCoveredFunctions to filter to a
particular file and uses that to replace most of the logic found in
llvm-cov report.
llvm-svn: 221962
On error conditions, relocAddressLess might claim that a value is less
than itself. Instead, abort llvm-readobj. No functionality change
intended.
llvm-svn: 221872
lib/Object is supposed to be robust to malformed object files. Don't
assert if we don't have a symbol table. I'll try to come up with a test
case later.
llvm-svn: 221870
This reverts commit r221836.
The tests are asserting on some buildbots. This also reverts the
test part of r221837 as it relies on dwarfdump dumping the
accelerator tables.
llvm-svn: 221842
With this patch MCDisassembler::getInstruction takes an ArrayRef<uint8_t>
instead of a MemoryObject.
Even on X86 there is a maximum size an instruction can have. Given
that, it seems way simpler and more efficient to just pass an ArrayRef
to the disassembler instead of a MemoryObject and have it do a virtual
call every time it wants some extra bytes.
llvm-svn: 221751
Add API for specifying which `LLVMContext` each `lto_module_t` and
`lto_code_gen_t` is in.
In particular, this enables the following flow:
for (auto &File : Files) {
lto_module_t M = lto_module_create_in_local_context(File...);
querySymbols(M);
lto_module_dispose(M);
}
lto_code_gen_t CG = lto_codegen_create_in_local_context();
for (auto &File : FilesToLink) {
lto_module_t M = lto_module_create_in_codegen_context(File..., CG);
lto_codegen_add_module(CG, M);
lto_module_dispose(M);
}
lto_codegen_compile(CG);
lto_codegen_write_merged_modules(CG, ...);
lto_codegen_dispose(CG);
This flow has a few benefits.
- Only one module (two if you count the combined module in the code
generator) is in memory at a time.
- Metadata (and constants) from files that are parsed to query symbols
but not linked into the code generator don't pollute the global
context.
- The first for loop can be parallelized, since each module is in its
own context.
- When the code generator is disposed, the memory from LTO gets freed.
rdar://problem/18767512
llvm-svn: 221733
Instead, we're going to separate metadata from the Value hierarchy. See
PR21532.
This reverts commit r221375.
This reverts commit r221373.
This reverts commit r221359.
This reverts commit r221167.
This reverts commit r221027.
This reverts commit r221024.
This reverts commit r221023.
This reverts commit r220995.
This reverts commit r220994.
llvm-svn: 221711
FIXME: It should work on not only Linux but elf-targeting gnu ld.
For example if LLVM_DYLIB_COMPONENTS is "BitWriter Support", CMake emits the command line like;
-Wl,--whole-archive
lib/libLLVMBitWriter.a
lib/libLLVMSupport.a *1
-Wl,--no-whole-archive
lib/libLLVMCore.a
lib/libLLVMSupport.a *2
-lrt -ldl -ltinfo -lpthread -lm
It works since symbols in LLVMCore is resolved with not *2 but *1.
Unfortunately, --gc-sections is not powerful in this case to prune unused "visibility(default)" entries.
I am still experimenting other way not to rely on --whole-archive.
llvm-svn: 221591
This introduces the symbol rewriter. This is an IR->IR transformation that is
implemented as a CodeGenPrepare pass. This allows for the transparent
adjustment of the symbols during compilation.
It provides a clean, simple, elegant solution for symbol inter-positioning. This
technique is often used, such as in the various sanitizers and performance
analysis.
The control of this is via a custom YAML syntax map file that indicates source
to destination mapping, so as to avoid having the compiler to know the exact
details of the source to destination transformations.
llvm-svn: 221548
Summary:
Teach llvm-symbolizer about PowerPC64 ELF function descriptors. Symbols in the .opd section point to function descriptors, the first word of which is a pointer to the real function. For the purposes of symbolizing we pretend that the symbol points directly to the function.
This is enough to get decent function names in stack traces for unoptimized binaries, which fixes the sanitizer print-stack-trace test on PowerPC64 Linux.
Reviewers: kcc, willschm, samsonov
Reviewed By: samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6110
llvm-svn: 221514
The ELF symbol `st_other` field might contain additional flags besides
visibility ones. This patch implements support for some MIPS specific
flags.
llvm-svn: 221491
add the code and test cases for 32-bit ARM symbolizer.
Also fixed the printing of data in code as it was not using the table correctly
and needed to fix one of the test cases too.
This will break lld’s test/mach-o/arm-interworking-movw.yaml till the tweak
for that is made. Which I’ll be committing immediately after this commit.
llvm-svn: 221470
Change `NamedMDNode::getOperator()` from returning `MDNode *` to
returning `Value *`. To reduce boilerplate at some call sites, add a
`getOperatorAsMDNode()` for named metadata that's expected to only
return `MDNode` -- for now, that's everything, but debug node named
metadata (such as llvm.dbg.cu and llvm.dbg.sp) will soon change. This
is part of PR21433.
Note that there's a follow-up patch to clang for the API change.
llvm-svn: 221375
This removes calls to isMaterializable in the following cases:
* It was redundant with a call to isDeclaration now that isDeclaration returns
the correct answer for materializable functions.
* It was followed by a call to Materialize. Just call Materialize and check EC.
llvm-svn: 221050
Summary:
This patch extends the 'show' and 'merge' commands in llvm-profdata to handle
sample PGO formats. Using the 'merge' command it is now possible to convert
one sample PGO format to another.
The only format that is currently not working is 'gcc'. I still need to
implement support for it in lib/ProfileData.
The changes in the sample profile support classes are needed for the
merge operation.
Reviewers: bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6065
llvm-svn: 221032
The getBinary and getBuffer method now return ordinary pointers of appropriate
const-ness. Ownership is transferred by calling takeBinary(), which returns a
pair of the Binary and a MemoryBuffer.
llvm-svn: 221003
We're using cl::opt here, but for some reason we're reading out one
particular option by hand instead. This makes -help and the like
behave rather poorly, so let's not do it this way.
llvm-svn: 220928
The also-emit-llvm option only supported getting the IR before optimizations.
This patch replaces it with a more generic save-temps option that saves the IR
both before and after optimizations.
llvm-svn: 220885
* Added LLVM libraries required for IntelJITEvents to LLVMBuild.txt.
* Removed 'jit' library from llvm-jitlistener.
* Added support for OptionalLibraries to llvm-build cmake files generator.
Patch by aleksey.a.bader@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5646
llvm-svn: 220848
I noticed that it was untested, and forcing it on caused some tests to fail:
LLVM :: Linker/metadata-a.ll
LLVM :: Linker/prefixdata.ll
LLVM :: Linker/type-unique-odr-a.ll
LLVM :: Linker/type-unique-simple-a.ll
LLVM :: Linker/type-unique-simple2-a.ll
LLVM :: Linker/type-unique-simple2.ll
LLVM :: Linker/type-unique-type-array-a.ll
LLVM :: Linker/unnamed-addr1-a.ll
LLVM :: Linker/visibility1.ll
If it is to be resurrected, it has to be fixed and we should probably have a
-preserve-source command line option in llvm-mc and run tests with and without
it.
llvm-svn: 220741
We used to always vectorize (slp and loop vectorize) in the LTO pass pipeline.
r220345 changed it so that we used the PassManager's fields 'LoopVectorize' and
'SLPVectorize' out of the desire to be able to disable vectorization using the
cl::opt flags 'vectorize-loops'/'slp-vectorize' which the before mentioned
fields default to.
Unfortunately, this turns off vectorization because those fields
default to false.
This commit adds flags to the LTO library to disable lto vectorization which
reconciles the desire to optionally disable vectorization during LTO and
the desired behavior of defaulting to enabled vectorization.
We really want tools to set PassManager flags directly to enable/disable
vectorization and not go the route via cl::opt flags *in*
PassManagerBuilder.cpp.
llvm-svn: 220652
To do this, change the representation of lazy loaded functions.
The previous representation cannot differentiate between a function whose body
has been removed and one whose body hasn't been read from the .bc file. That
means that in order to drop a function, the entire body had to be read.
llvm-svn: 220580
Summary:
This patch adds a new CMake build setting LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB, which defaults to OFF. When set to ON, this will generate a shared library containing most of LLVM. The contents of the shared library can be overriden by specifying LLVM_DYLIB_COMPONENTS. LLVM_DYLIB_COMPONENTS can be set to a semi-colon delimited list of any LLVM components that you llvm-config can resolve.
On Windows, unless you are using Cygwin, you must specify an explicit symbol export file using LLVM_EXPORTED_SYMBOL_FILE. On Cygwin and all unix-like platforms if you do not specify LLVM_EXPORTED_SYMBOL_FILE, an export file containing only the LLVM C API will be auto-generated from the list of LLVM components specified in LLVM_DYLIB_COMPONENTS.
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: rnk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5890
llvm-svn: 220490
This tool lets us build LLVM components within the tree by setting up a
$GOPATH that resembles a tree fetched in the normal way with "go get".
It is intended that components such as the Go frontend will be built in-tree
using this tool.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5902
llvm-svn: 220462
I think it might make sense to make COFF::MaxNumberOfSections16 be a uint32_t, however, that may have wider-reaching implications in other projects, which is why I did not change that declaration.
llvm-svn: 220384
This is a micro optimization, but also makes the code a bit more flexible.
The MRIMembers variable is a short term hack. It is going away in the next
commit.
llvm-svn: 220334
Revert "Correctly handle references to section symbols."
Revert "Allow forward references to section symbols."
Rui found a regression I am debugging.
llvm-svn: 220010
llvm-symbolizer will consult one of the .dSYM paths passed via -dsym-hint
if it fails to find the .dSYM bundle at the default location.
llvm-svn: 220004
When processing assembly like
.long .text
we were creating a new undefined symbol .text. GAS on the other hand would
handle that as a reference to the .text section.
This patch implements that by creating the section symbols earlier so that
they are visible during asm parsing.
The patch also updates llvm-readobj to print the symbol number in the relocation
dump so that the test can differentiate between two sections with the same name.
llvm-svn: 219829
I was quiet surprised to find this feature being used. Fortunately the uses
I found look fairly simple. In fact, they are just a very verbose version
of the regular ar commands.
Start implementing it then by parsing the script and setting the command
variables as if we had a regular command line.
This patch adds just enough support to create an empty archive and do a bit
of error checking. In followup patches I will implement at least addmod
and addlib.
From the description in the manual, even the more general case should not
be too hard to implement if needed. The features that don't map 1:1 to
the simple command line are
* Reading from multiple archives.
* Creating multiple archives.
llvm-svn: 219521
Long section names are represented as a slash followed by a numeric
ASCII string. This number is an offset into a string table.
Print the appropriate entry in the string table instead of the less
enlightening /4.
N.B. yaml2obj already does the right thing, this test exercises both
sides of the (de-)serialization.
llvm-svn: 219458
There are two methods in SectionRef that can fail:
* getName: The index into the string table can be invalid.
* getContents: The section might point to invalid contents.
Every other method will always succeed and returning and std::error_code just
complicates the code. For example, a section can have an invalid alignment,
but if we are able to get to the section structure at all and create a
SectionRef, we will always be able to read that invalid alignment.
llvm-svn: 219314
this, and in some circumstances (e.g. reducing particularly large test-cases)
this was causing bugpoint to be killed for hitting open file-handle limits.
No test case: I was only able to trigger this with test cases taking upwards of
10 mins to run.
llvm-svn: 219244
PE/COFF has a special section (.drectve) which can be used to pass options to
the linker (similar to LC_LINKER_OPTION). Add support to llvm-readobj to print
the contents of the section for tests.
llvm-svn: 219228
The plugin API doesn't have the notion of linkonce, only weak. It is up to the
plugin to figure out if a symbol used only for the symbol table can be dropped.
In particular, it has to avoid dropping a linkonce_odr selected by gold if there
is also a weak_odr.
llvm-svn: 219188
The call to copyAttributesFrom will copy the visibility, which might assert
if it were to produce something invalid like "internal hidden". We avoid it
by first creating the replacement with the original linkage and then setting
it to internal affter the call to copyAttributesFrom.
llvm-svn: 219184
When creating an internal function replacement for use in an alias we were
not remapping the argument uses in the instructions to point to the new
arguments.
llvm-svn: 219177
Codeview line tables for functions in different sections refer to a common
STRING_TABLE_SUBSECTION for filenames.
This happens when building with -Gy or with inline functions with MSVC.
Original patch by Jeff Muizelaar!
llvm-svn: 219125
This patch defines a new iterator for the imported symbols.
Make a change to COFFDumper to use that iterator to print
out imported symbols and its ordinals.
llvm-svn: 218915
When the flag is given, the command prints out the COFF import table.
Currently only the import table directory will be printed.
I'm going to make another patch to print out the imported symbols.
The implementation of import directory entry iterator in
COFFObjectFile.cpp was buggy. This patch fixes that too.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5569
llvm-svn: 218891
r206400 and r209442 added remarks that are disabled by default.
However, if a diagnostic handler is registered, the remarks are sent
unfiltered to the handler. This is the right behaviour for clang, since
it has its own filters.
However, the diagnostic handler exposed in the LTO API receives only the
severity and message. It doesn't have the information to filter by pass
name. For LTO, disabled remarks should be filtered by the producer.
I've changed `LLVMContext::setDiagnosticHandler()` to take a `bool`
argument indicating whether to respect the built-in filters. This
defaults to `false`, so other consumers don't have a behaviour change,
but `LTOCodeGenerator::setDiagnosticHandler()` sets it to `true`.
To make this behaviour testable, I added a `-use-diagnostic-handler`
command-line option to `llvm-lto`.
This fixes PR21108.
llvm-svn: 218784
This commit fixes llvm-cov's function coverage metric by using the number of executed functions instead of the number of fully covered functions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5196
llvm-svn: 218672
Users of getSectionContents shouldn't try to pass in BSS or virtual
sections. In all instances, this is a bug in the code calling this
routine.
N.B. Some COFF implementations (like CL) will mark their BSS sections as
taking space on disk. This would confuse COFFObjectFile into thinking
the section is larger than the file.
llvm-svn: 218549
So in fully linked images when a call is made through a stub it now gets a
comment like the following in the disassembly:
callq 0x100000f6c ## symbol stub for: _printf
indicating the call is to a symbol stub and which symbol it is for. This is
done for branch reference types and seeing if the branch target is in a stub
section and if so using the indirect symbol table entry for that stub and
using that symbol table entries symbol name.
llvm-svn: 218546
files in this directory. If it should be defined anywhere, it should be defined
when building lib/LTO/LTOCodeGenerator.cpp, but we've not had it defined there
for quite some time, so that doesn't really seem to be very important. (It also
would slow down the modules build by creating extra module variants.)
llvm-svn: 218544
get the literal string “Hello world” printed as a comment on the instruction
that loads the pointer to it. For now this is just for x86_64. So for object
files with relocation entries it produces things like:
leaq L_.str(%rip), %rax ## literal pool for: "Hello world\n"
and similar for fully linked images like executables:
leaq 0x4f(%rip), %rax ## literal pool for: "Hello world\n"
Also to allow testing against darwin’s otool(1), I hooked up the existing
-no-show-raw-insn option to the Mach-O parser code, added the new Mach-O
only -full-leading-addr option to match otool(1)'s printing of addresses and
also added the new -print-imm-hex option.
llvm-svn: 218423
This patch removes the old JIT memory manager (which does not provide any
useful functionality now that the old JIT is gone), and migrates the few
remaining clients over to SectionMemoryManager.
http://llvm.org/PR20848
llvm-svn: 218316
This splits the logic for actually looking up coverage information
from the logic that displays it. These were tangled rather thoroughly
so this change is a bit large, but it mostly consists of moving things
around. The coverage lookup logic itself now lives in the library,
rather than being spread between the library and the tool.
llvm-svn: 218184
The filename-equivalence flag allows you to show coverage when your
source files don't have the same full paths as those that generated
the data. This is mostly useful for writing tests in a cross-platform
way.
This wasn't triggering in cases where the filename was derived
directly from the coverage data, which meant certain types of test
case were impossible to write. This patch fixes that, and following
patches involve tests that need this.
llvm-svn: 218108
This format is simply a regular object file with the bitcode stored in a
section named ".llvmbc", plus any number of other (non-allocated) sections.
One immediate use case for this is to accommodate compilation processes
which expect the object file to contain metadata in non-allocated sections,
such as the ".go_export" section used by some Go compilers [1], although I
imagine that in the future we could consider compiling parts of the module
(such as large non-inlinable functions) directly into the object file to
improve LTO efficiency.
[1] http://golang.org/doc/install/gccgo#Imports
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4371
llvm-svn: 218078
- Replace std::unordered_map with DenseMap
- Use std::pair instead of manually combining two unsigneds
- Assert if insert is called with invalid arguments
- Avoid an unnecessary copy of a std::vector
llvm-svn: 218074
As suggested by David Blaikie, this may be easier to read.
The original warning was:
../tools/llvm-cov/llvm-cov.cpp:53:49: error: ISO C++ forbids zero-size array 'argv' [-Werror=pedantic]
std::string Invocation(std::string(argv[0]) + " " + argv[1]);
It seems to be the case that GCC's warning gets confused and thinks
'argv' is a declaration here. GCC bugzilla issue #61259.
llvm-svn: 218048
This encapsulates how we handle the coverage regions of a file or
function. In the old model, the user had to deal with nested regions,
so they needed to maintain their own auxiliary data structures to get
any useful information out of this. The new API provides a sequence of
non-overlapping coverage segments, which makes it possible to render
coverage information in a single pass and avoids a fair amount of
extra work.
llvm-svn: 217975
It isn't always useful to skip blank lines, as evidenced by the
somewhat awkward use of line_iterator in llvm-cov. This adds a knob to
control whether or not to skip blanks.
llvm-svn: 217960
SourceCoverageView currently has "Kind" and a list of child views, all
of which must have either an expansion or an instantiation Kind. In
addition to being an error-prone design, this makes it awkward to
differentiate between the two child types and adds a number of
optionally used members to the type.
Split the subview types into their own separate objects, and maintain
lists of each rather than one combined "Children" list.
llvm-svn: 217940
First step done in this commit is to get flush out enough of the
SymbolizerGetOpInfo() routine to symbolic an X86_64 hello world .o and
its loading of the literal string and call to printf. Also the code to
symbolicate the X86_64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR relocation and a test is also
added to show a slightly more complicated case.
Next will be to flush out enough of SymbolizerSymbolLookUp() to get the
literal string “Hello world” printed as a comment on the instruction that load
the pointer to it.
llvm-svn: 217893
Teach yaml2obj how to make a bigobj COFF file. Like the rest of LLVM,
we automatically decide whether or not to use regular COFF or bigobj
COFF on the fly depending on how many sections the resulting object
would have.
This ends the task of adding bigobj support to LLVM.
N.B. This was tested by forcing yaml2obj to be used in bigobj mode
regardless of the number of sections. While a dedicated test was
written, the smallest I could make it was 36 MB (!) of yaml and it still
took a significant amount of time to execute on a powerful machine.
llvm-svn: 217858
This finishes the ability of llvm-objdump to print out all information from
the LC_DYLD_INFO load command.
The -bind option prints out symbolic references that dyld must resolve
immediately.
The -lazy-bind option prints out symbolc reference that are lazily resolved on
first use.
The -weak-bind option prints out information about symbols which dyld must
try to coalesce across images.
llvm-svn: 217853
This changes the debug output of the llvm-cov tool to consistently
write to stderr, and moves the highlighting output closer to where
it's relevant.
llvm-svn: 217838
In r217746, though it was supposed to be NFC, I broke llvm-cov's
handling of showing regions without showing counts. This should've
shown up in the existing tests, except they were checking debug output
that was displayed regardless of what was actually output. I've moved
the relevant debug output to a more appropriate place so that the
tests catch this kind of thing.
llvm-svn: 217835
Teach WinCOFFObjectWriter how to write -mbig-obj style object files;
these object files allow for more sections inside an object file.
Our support for BigObj is notably different from binutils and cl: we
implicitly upgrade object files to BigObj instead of asking the user to
compile the same file *again* but with another flag. This matches up
with how LLVM treats ELF variants.
This was tested by forcing LLVM to always emit BigObj files and running
the entire test suite. A specific test has also been added.
I've lowered the maximum number of sections in a normal COFF file,
VS "14" CTP 3 supports no more than 65279 sections. This is important
otherwise we might not switch to BigObj quickly enough, leaving us with
a COFF file that we couldn't link.
yaml2obj support is all that remains to implement.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5349
llvm-svn: 217812
A single function in SourceCoverageDataManager was the only user of
some of the comparisons in CounterMappingRegion, and at this point we
know that only one file is relevant. This lets us use slightly simpler
logic directly in the client.
llvm-svn: 217745
Similar to my previous -exports-trie option, the -rebase option dumps info from
the LC_DYLD_INFO load command. The rebasing info is a list of the the locations
that dyld needs to adjust if a mach-o image is not loaded at its preferred
address. Since ASLR is now the default, images almost never load at their
preferred address, and thus need to be rebased by dyld.
llvm-svn: 217709
This fixes a call to sys::fs::equivalent that should've been to
CodeCoverageTool::equivalentFiles, which lets us restore the test of
r217476 that was removed in r217478.
This reverts r217478, but the test works this time.
llvm-svn: 217646
With this a DataLayoutPass can be reused for multiple modules.
Once we have doInitialization/doFinalization, it doesn't seem necessary to pass
a Module to the constructor.
Overall this change seems in line with the idea of making DataLayout a required
part of Module. With it the only way of having a DataLayout used is to add it
to the Module.
llvm-svn: 217548
This adds support for reading the "bigobj" variant of COFF produced by
cl's /bigobj and mingw's -mbig-obj.
The most significant difference that bigobj brings is more than 2**16
sections to COFF.
bigobj brings a few interesting differences with it:
- It doesn't have a Characteristics field in the file header.
- It doesn't have a SizeOfOptionalHeader field in the file header (it's
only used in executable files).
- Auxiliary symbol records have the same width as a symbol table entry.
Since symbol table entries are bigger, so are auxiliary symbol
records.
Write support will come soon.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5259
llvm-svn: 217496
This is the plugin version of pr20882.
This handles the case of every common symbol being in the IR. We will need some
support from gold to handle the case where some symbols are in ELF and some in
the IR.
llvm-svn: 217458
llvm-cov had a SourceRange type that was nearly identical to a
CountedRegion except that it shaved off a couple of fields. There
aren't likely to be enough of these for the minor memory savings to be
worth the extra complexity here.
llvm-svn: 217417
The basic idea is similar to the existing cross compilation support. A directory must be configured to build host versions of tablegen tools and llvm-config. This directory can be user provided (and configured), or it can be created during the build. During a build the native build directory will be configured and built to supply the tablegen tools used during the build. A user could also explicitly provide the tablegen executables to run on the CMake command line.
llvm-svn: 217105
I took a guess at the changes to the gold plugin, because that doesn't
seem to build by default for me. Not sure what dependencies I might be
missing for that.
llvm-svn: 217056
This forces callers to use std::move when calling it. It is somewhat odd to have
code with std::move that doesn't always move, but it is also odd to have code
without std::move that sometimes moves.
llvm-svn: 217049
This CL replaces the constant DarwinX86AsmBackend.PushInstrSize with a method
that lets the backend account for different sizes of "push %reg" instruction
sizes.
llvm-svn: 217020
The code is buggy and barely tested. It is also mostly boilerplate.
(This includes MCObjectDisassembler, which is the interface to that
functionality)
Following an IRC discussion with Jim Grosbach, it seems sensible to just
nuke the whole lot of functionality, and dig it up from VCS if
necessary (I hope not!).
All of this stuff appears to have been added in a huge patch dump (look
at the timeframe surrounding e.g. r182628) where almost every patch
seemed to be untested and not reviewed before being committed.
Post-review responses to the patches were never addressed. I don't think
any of it would have passed pre-commit review.
I doubt anyone is depending on this, since this code appears to be
extremely buggy. In limited testing that Michael Spencer and I did, we
couldn't find a single real-world object file that wouldn't crash the
CFG reconstruction stuff. The symbolizer stuff has O(n^2) behavior and
so is not much use to anyone anyway. It seemed simpler to remove them as
a whole. Most of this code is boilerplate, which is the only way it was
able to scrape by 60% coverage.
HEADSUP: Modules folks, some files I nuked were referenced from
include/llvm/module.modulemap; I just deleted the references. Hopefully
that is the right fix (one was a FIXME though!).
llvm-svn: 216983
This allows streams that only use BLOCKINFO for debugging purposes to omit
the block entirely. As long as another stream is available with the correct
BLOCKINFO, the first stream can still be analyzed and dumped.
As part of this commit, BitstreamReader gets a move constructor and move
assignment operator, as well as a takeBlockInfo method.
llvm-svn: 216826
MachOObjectFile in lib/Object currently has no support for parsing the rebase,
binding, and export information from the LC_DYLD_INFO load command in final
linked mach-o images. This patch adds support for parsing the exports trie data
structure. It also adds an option to llvm-objdump to dump that export info.
I did the exports parsing first because it is the hardest. The information is
encoded in a trie structure, but the standard ObjectFile way to inspect content
is through iterators. So I needed to make an iterator that would do a
non-recursive walk through the trie and maintain the concatenation of edges
needed for the current string prefix.
I plan to add similar support in MachOObjectFile and llvm-objdump to
parse/display the rebasing and binding info too.
llvm-svn: 216808
The attached patch simplifies a few interfaces that don't need to take
ownership of a buffer.
For example, both parseAssembly and parseBitcodeFile will parse the
entire buffer before returning. There is no need to take ownership.
Using a MemoryBufferRef makes it obvious in the type signature that
there is no ownership transfer.
llvm-svn: 216488
The memory management in BugPoint is fairly convoluted, so this just unwraps
one layer by changing the return type of functions that always return
owned Modules.
llvm-svn: 216464
Take a StringRef instead of a "const char *".
Take a "std::error_code &" instead of a "std::string &" for error.
A create static method would be even better, but this patch is already a bit too
big.
llvm-svn: 216393
The switch statement would never fire due to the preceding break statement. Also, the switch statement has a default label with no case labels. Simplified the code, and allow it to execute.
llvm-svn: 216346
There are two parts to this. First, the plugin needs to tell gold the comdat by
setting comdat_key.
What gets things a bit more complicated is that gold only seems
symbols. In particular, if A is an alias to B, it only sees the symbols
A and B. It can then ask us to keep symbol A but drop symbol B. What
we have to do instead is to create an internal version of B and make A
an alias to that.
At some point some of this logic should be moved to lib/Linker so that
we don't map a Constant to an internal version just to have lib/Linker
map that again to the destination module.
The reason for implementing this in tools/gold for now is simplicity.
With it in place it should be possible to update clang to use comdats
for constructors and destructors on ELF without breaking the LTO
bootstrap. Once that is done I intend to come back and improve the
interface lib/Linker exposes.
llvm-svn: 216302
This commit expands llvm-cov's functionality by adding support for a new code coverage
tool that uses LLVM's coverage mapping format and clang's instrumentation based profiling.
The gcov compatible tool can be invoked by supplying the 'gcov' command as the first argument,
or by modifying the tool's name to end with 'gcov'.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4445
llvm-svn: 216300
AtomicExpandLoadLinked is currently rather ARM-specific. This patch is the first of
a group that aim at making it more target-independent. See
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2014-August/075873.html
for details
The command line option is "atomic-expand"
llvm-svn: 216231
There is a fundamental difference between how the gold API and lib/LTO view
the LTO process.
The gold API talks about a particular symbol in a particular file. The lib/LTO
API talks about a symbol in the merged module.
The merged module is then defined in terms of the IR semantics. In particular,
a linkonce_odr GV is only copied if it is used, since it is valid to drop
unused linkonce_odr GVs.
In the testcase in pr19901 both properties collide. What happens is that gold
asks us to keep a particular linkonce_odr symbol, but the IR linker doesn't
copy it to the merged module and we never have a chance to ask lib/LTO to keep
it.
This patch fixes it by having a more direct implementation of the gold API. If
it asks us to keep a symbol, we change the linkage so it is not linkonce. If it
says we can drop a symbol, we do so. All of this before we even send the module
to lib/Linker.
Since now we don't have to produce LTO_SYMBOL_SCOPE_DEFAULT_CAN_BE_HIDDEN,
during symbol resolution we can use a temporary LLVMContext and do lazy
module loading. This allows us to keep the minimum possible amount of
allocated memory around. This should also allow as much parallelism as
we want, since there is no shared context.
llvm-svn: 216215
Implement `uselistorder` and `uselistorder_bb` assembly directives,
which allow the use-list order to be recovered when round-tripping to
assembly.
This is the bulk of PR20515.
llvm-svn: 216025
Owning the buffer is somewhat inflexible. Some Binaries have sub Binaries
(like Archive) and we had to create dummy buffers just to handle that. It is
also a bad fit for IRObjectFile where the Module wants to own the buffer too.
Keeping this ownership would make supporting IR inside native objects
particularly painful.
This patch focuses in lib/Object. If something elsewhere used to own an Binary,
now it also owns a MemoryBuffer.
This patch introduces a few new types.
* MemoryBufferRef. This is just a pair of StringRefs for the data and name.
This is to MemoryBuffer as StringRef is to std::string.
* OwningBinary. A combination of Binary and a MemoryBuffer. This is needed
for convenience functions that take a filename and return both the
buffer and the Binary using that buffer.
The C api now uses OwningBinary to avoid any change in semantics. I will start
a new thread to see if we want to change it and how.
llvm-svn: 216002
* Use StringRef instead of std::string&
* Return a std::unique_ptr<Module> instead of taking an optional module to write
to (was not really used).
* Use current comment style.
* Use current naming convention.
llvm-svn: 215989
Call `verifyModule()` after parsing and after every transformation.
Also convert some `DEBUG(dbgs())` to `errs()` to increase visibility
into what's going on.
llvm-svn: 215951
file with -macho, the Mach-O specific object file parser option.
After some discussion I chose to do this implementation contained in the logic
of llvm-objdump’s MachODump.cpp using a second disassembler for thumb when
needed and with updates mostly contained in the MachOObjectFile class.
llvm-svn: 215931
Add header guards to files that were missing guards. Remove #endif comments
as they don't seem common in LLVM (we can easily add them back if we decide
they're useful)
Changes made by clang-tidy with minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 215558
ARM bots (& others, I think, now that I look) were failing because we
were using incorrect printf-style format specifiers. They were wrong
on almost any platform, actually, just mostly harmlessly so.
llvm-svn: 215196
be deleted. This will be reapplied as soon as possible and before
the 3.6 branch date at any rate.
Approved by Jim Grosbach, Lang Hames, Rafael Espindola.
This reverts commits r215111, 215115, 215116, 215117, 215136.
llvm-svn: 215154
I am sure we will be finding bits and pieces of dead code for years to
come, but this is a good start.
Thanks to Lang Hames for making MCJIT a good replacement!
llvm-svn: 215111
Also make the disassembler created with the Mach-O parser (the -m option)
pick up the Target specific attributes specified with -mattr option.
llvm-svn: 215032
mode.
This will cause -verify mode to report failure when RuntimeDyld encounters an
internal error (e.g. overflows in relocation computations). Previously we had
let these errors slip past unreported.
llvm-svn: 214925
This is mostly a cleanup, but it changes a fairly old behavior.
Every "real" LTO user was already disabling the silly internalize pass
and creating the internalize pass itself. The difference with this
patch is for "opt -std-link-opts" and the C api.
Now to get a usable behavior out of opt one doesn't need the funny
looking command line:
opt -internalize -disable-internalize -internalize-public-api-list=foo,bar -std-link-opts
llvm-svn: 214919
Updated `verify-uselistorder` to more than double the number of use-list
orders it checks.
- Every time it verifies an order, it then reverses the order and
verifies again.
- It now verifies the initial order, before running any shuffles.
Changed the default to `-num-shuffles=1`, since this is already four
checks, and after r214584 shuffling is guaranteed to make a new order.
This is part of PR5680.
llvm-svn: 214596
`shuffleUseLists()` is only used in `verify-uselistorder`, so move it
there to avoid bloating other executables. As a drive-by, update some
of the header docs.
This is part of PR5680.
llvm-svn: 214592
"Create a default symver on Linux like ELF OSes."
Fails the build under Debian with ld.gold:
/usr/bin/ld.gold: --default-symver: unknown option
llvm-svn: 214482
Turns out `parseBitcodeFile()` does *not* take ownership of the buffer.
This was already clear in the header docs, but I obviously didn't read
them (having noticed that it gets stored in a `unique_ptr<>`).
llvm-svn: 214313
use in -verify mode.
This patch adds three hidden command line options to llvm-rtdyld:
-target-addr-start <start-addr> : Specify the start of the virtual address
space on the phony target.
-target-addr-end <end-addr> : Specify the end of the virtual address space
on the phony target.
-target-section-sep <sep> : Specify the separation (in bytes) between the
end of one section and the start of the next.
These options automatically default to sane values for the target platform. In
particular, they allow narrow (e.g. 32-bit, 16-bit) targets to be tested from
wider (e.g. 64-bit, 32-bit) hosts without overflowing pointers.
The section separation option defaults to zero, but can be set to a large number
(e.g. 1 << 32) to force large separations between sections in order to
stress-test large-code-model code.
llvm-svn: 214255
Predict and serialize use-list order in bitcode. This makes the option
`-preserve-bc-use-list-order` work *most* of the time, but this is still
experimental.
- Builds a full value-table up front in the writer, sets up a list of
use-list orders to write out, and discards the table. This is a
simpler first step than determining the order from the various
overlapping IDs of values on-the-fly.
- The shuffles stored in the use-list order list have an unnecessarily
large memory footprint.
- `blockaddress` expressions cause functions to be materialized
out-of-order. For now I've ignored this problem, so use-list orders
will be wrong for constants used by functions that have block
addresses taken. There are a couple of ways to fix this, but I
don't have a concrete plan yet.
- When materializing functions lazily, the use-lists for constants
will not be correct. This use case is out of scope: what should the
use-list order be, if it's incomplete?
This is part of PR5680.
llvm-svn: 214125
Ugh. Turns out not even transformation passes link in how to read IR.
I sincerely believe the buildbots will finally agree with my system
after this though. (I don't really understand why all of this has been
working on my system, but not on all the buildbots.)
Create a new tool called llvm-uselistorder to use for verifying use-list
order. For now, just dump everything from the (now defunct)
-verify-use-list-order pass into the tool.
This might be a better way to test use-list order anyway.
Part of PR5680.
llvm-svn: 213957
StringMap doesn't guarantee any particular iteration order,
this is suboptimal when comparing llvm-vtabledump's output for two
object files.
llvm-svn: 213921
The -print-file-name option in llvm-nm is to precede each symbol
with the object file it came from. While code for the parsing of this
option and its aliases existed there was no code to implement it.
llvm-svn: 213906
This tool's job is to dump the vtables inside object files. It is
currently limited to MS ABI vf- and vb-tables but it will eventually
support Itanium-style v-tables as well.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4584
llvm-svn: 213903
This patch introduces a 'stub_addr' builtin that can be used to find the address
of the stub for a given (<file>, <section>, <symbol>) tuple. This address can be
used both to verify the contents of stubs (by loading from the returned address)
and to verify references to stubs (by comparing against the returned address).
Example (1) - Verifying stub contents:
Load 8 bytes (assuming a 64-bit target) from the stub for 'x' in the __text
section of f.o, and compare that value against the addres of 'x'.
# rtdyld-check: *{8}(stub_addr(f.o, __text, x) = x
Example (2) - Verifying references to stubs:
Decode the immediate of the instruction at label 'l', and verify that it's
equal to the offset from the next instruction's PC to the stub for 'y' in the
__text section of f.o (i.e. it's the correct PC-rel difference).
# rtdyld-check: decode_operand(l, 4) = stub_addr(f.o, __text, y) - next_pc(l)
l:
movq y@GOTPCREL(%rip), %rax
Since stub inspection requires cooperation with RuntimeDyldImpl this patch
pimpl-ifies RuntimeDyldChecker. Its implementation is moved in to a new class,
RuntimeDyldCheckerImpl, that has access to the definition of RuntimeDyldImpl.
llvm-svn: 213698
createBinary documented that it destroyed the parameter in error cases,
though by observation it does not. By passing the unique_ptr by value
rather than lvalue reference, callers are now explicit about passing
ownership and the function implements the documented contract. Remove
the explicit documentation, since now the behavior cannot be anything
other than what was documented, so it's redundant.
Also drops a unique_ptr::release in llvm-nm that was always run on a
null unique_ptr anyway.
llvm-svn: 213557
Summary: This patch introduces two new iterator ranges and updates existing code to use it. No functional change intended.
Test Plan: All tests (make check-all) still pass.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4481
llvm-svn: 213474
Until now, attempting to create an alias of a required option would
complain if the user supplied the alias, because the required option
didn't have a value. Similarly, if you said the alias was required,
then using the base option would complain that the alias wasn't
supplied. Lastly, if you put required on both, *neither* option would
work.
By changning alias to overload addOccurrence and setting cl::Required
on the original option, we can get this to behave in a more useful
way. I've also added a test and updated a user that was getting this
wrong.
llvm-svn: 212986
The size of the uninitialized sections, like BSS, can exceed the size of
the object file.
Do not attempt to grab the contents of such sections.
llvm-svn: 212953
the specified section. This is same functionality as darwin’s nm(1) "-s" flag.
There is one FIXME in the code and I’m all ears to anyone that can help me
with that. This option takes exactly two strings and should be allowed
anywhere on the command line. Such that "llvm-nm -s __TEXT __text foo.o"
would work. But that does not as the CommandLine Library does not have a
way to make this work as far as I can tell. For now the "-s __TEXT __text"
has to be last on the command line.
llvm-svn: 212842
This will allow the "-s" flag to implemented in the future as it
is in darwin’s nm(1) to list symbols only in the specified section.
Given a LGTM by Shankar Easwaran who originally implemented
the support for lvm-nm’s -print-armap and archive map symbols.
llvm-svn: 212576
Use 0 for the invalid buffer instead of -1/~0 and switch to unsigned
representation to enable more idiomatic usage.
Also introduce a trivial SourceMgr::getMainFileID() instead of hard-coding 0/1
to identify the main file.
llvm-svn: 212398
There were two issues here:
1. At the very least, scattered relocations cannot use the same code to
determine the corresponding symbol being referred to. For some reason we
pretend there is no symbol, even when one actually exists in the symtab, so to
match this behaviour getRelocationSymbol should simply return symbols_end for
scattered relocations.
2. Printing "-" when we can't get a symbol (including the scattered case, but
not exclusively), isn't that helpful. In both cases there *is* interesting
information in that field, so we should print it. As hex will do.
Small part of rdar://problem/17553104
llvm-svn: 212332
We want to encourage users of the C++ LTO API to reuse memory buffers instead
of repeatedly opening and reading the same file contents.
This reverts commit r212305 and implements a tidier scheme.
llvm-svn: 212308
On at least my machine, ar does not register an all symbols read hook (which
previously triggered target initialization), but it does register a claim
files hook, which depends on the targets being initialized.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4372
llvm-svn: 212303
This rename makes it easier to identify the specific overload being called
in each particular case and makes future refactorings easier.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4370
llvm-svn: 212302
symbol’s name. On darwin the -j flag is used (often in combinations
with other flags) to produce a complete list of symbol names which
than can then be reorder and used with ld(1)’s -order_file.
llvm-svn: 212294
This should allow llvm-ar to be used instead of gnu ar + plugin in a LTO
build. I will add a release note about it once I finish a LTO bootstrap with it.
llvm-svn: 212287
Now that we have a lib/MC/MCAnalysis, the dependency was there just because
of two helper classes. Move the two over to MC.
This will allow IRObjectFile to parse inline assembly.
llvm-svn: 212248
The new library is 150KB on a Release+Asserts build, so it is quiet a bit of
code that regular users of MC don't need to link with now.
llvm-svn: 212209
to select the slice out of a Mach-O universal file. This also includes
support for -arch all, selecting the host architecture by default from
a universal file and checking if -arch is used with a standard Mach-O
it matches that architecture.
llvm-svn: 212108
universal file. This also includes support for -arch all, selecting the host
architecture by default from a universal file and checking if -arch is used
with a standard Mach-O it matches that architecture.
llvm-svn: 212054
Make llvm-cov compatible with gcov for cases where multiple files are
specified on the command line. That is, loop over each one and report
coverage, and report errors on stderr only rather than via return
code.
llvm-svn: 211959
This patch adds a "-verify" mode to the llvm-rtdyld utility. In verify mode,
llvm-rtdyld will test supplied expressions against the linked program images
that it creates in memory. This scheme can be used to verify the correctness
of the relocation logic applied by RuntimeDyld.
The expressions to test will be read out of files passed via the -check option
(there may be more than one of these). Expressions to check are extracted from
lines of the form:
# rtdyld-check: <expression>
This system is designed to fit the llvm-lit regression test workflow. It is
format and target agnostic, and supports verification of images linked for
remote targets. The expression language is defined in
llvm/include/llvm/RuntimeDyldChecker.h . Examples can be found in
test/ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld.
llvm-svn: 211956
Add the new AppContainer characteristic which is import for Windows Store
(Metro) compatible applications. Add the new Control Flow Guard flag to bring
the enumeration up to date with the current values as of Windows 8.1.
llvm-svn: 211855
Any uses of tools/lto as a static lib should probably move to lib/LTO.
This was also never implemented in the configure build, so this reduces
the differences among the two.
llvm-svn: 211852
This fixes a regression that made clang -flto -Wl,--plugin-opt=-mattr=+aes not
pass the "+aes" option to the LTOCodeGenerator attributes.
llvm-svn: 211804
string_ostream is a safe and efficient string builder that combines opaque
stack storage with a built-in ostream interface.
small_string_ostream<bytes> additionally permits an explicit stack storage size
other than the default 128 bytes to be provided. Beyond that, storage is
transferred to the heap.
This convenient class can be used in most places an
std::string+raw_string_ostream pair or SmallString<>+raw_svector_ostream pair
would previously have been used, in order to guarantee consistent access
without byte truncation.
The patch also converts much of LLVM to use the new facility. These changes
include several probable bug fixes for truncated output, a programming error
that's no longer possible with the new interface.
llvm-svn: 211749
This makes the buffer ownership on error conditions very natural. The buffer
is only moved out of the argument if an object is constructed that now
owns the buffer.
llvm-svn: 211546
This allows us to just use a std::unique_ptr to store the pointer to the buffer.
The flip side is that they have to support releasing the buffer back to the
caller.
Overall this looks like a more efficient and less brittle api.
llvm-svn: 211542
to match llvm-size and other UNIX systems for their nm(1).
Tweak test cases that used llvm-nm with standard input to add a "-" to
indicate that and add a test case to check the default of a.out for llvm-nm.
llvm-svn: 211529
the tool is given multiple files. Also fix the same issue with Mach-O
universal files. And fix the newline spacing to separate the output
in these cases.
llvm-svn: 211405
Back in r128440 tools/LTO started exporting the disassembler interface. It
was never clear why, but whatever the reason I am pretty sure it doesn't hold
for tools/gold.
llvm-svn: 211325
This fixes the processing of --plugin-opt=-jump-table-type=arity.
Nice properties:
* We call InitTargetOptionsFromCodeGenFlags once.
* We call parseCodeGenDebugOptions once.
* It works :-)
llvm-svn: 211322
fat files) to print “ (for architecture XYZ)” for fat files with more than
one architecture to be like what the darwin tools do for fat files.
Also clean up the Mach-O printing of archive membernames in llvm-nm to use
the darwin form of "libx.a(foo.o)".
llvm-svn: 211316
The tools/lto API is not the best choice for implementing a gold plugin. Among
other issues:
* It is an stable ABI. Old errors stay and we have to be really careful
before adding new features.
* It has to support two fairly different linkers: gold and ld64.
* We end up with a plugin that depends on a shared lib, something quiet
unusual in LLVM land.
* It hides LLVM. For some features in the gold plugin it would be really
nice to be able to just get a Module or a GlobalValue.
This change is intended to be a very direct translation from the C API. It
will just enable other fixes and cleanups.
Tested with a LTO bootstrap on linux.
llvm-svn: 211315
dynamic-no-pic is just another output type. If gnu ld gets support for MachO,
it should also add something like LDPO_DYN_NO_PIC to the plugin interface.
llvm-svn: 211305
fat files containing archives.
Also fix a bug in MachOUniversalBinary::ObjectForArch::ObjectForArch()
where it needed a >= when comparing the Index with the number of
objects in a fat file. As the index starts at 0.
llvm-svn: 211230
and the -l option for the long format. Also when the object is a Mach-O
file and the format is berkeley produce output like darwin’s default size(1)
summary berkeley derived output.
Like System V format, there are also some small changes in how and where
the file names and archive member names are printed for darwin and
Mach-O.
Like the changes to llvm-nm these are the first steps in seeing if it is
possible to make llvm-size produce the same output as darwin's size(1).
llvm-svn: 211117
While std::error_code itself seems to work OK in all platforms, there
are few annoying differences with regards to the std::errc enumeration.
This patch adds a simple llvm enumeration, which will hopefully avoid build
breakages in other platforms and surprises as we get more uses of
std::error_code.
llvm-svn: 210920
Without initializing the assembly printers a shared library build of opt is
linked with these libraries whereas for a static build these libraries are dead
code eliminated. This is unfortunate for plugins in case they want to use them,
as they neither can rely on opt to provide this functionality nor can they link
the printers in themselves as this breaks with a shared object build of opt.
This patch calls InitializeAllAsmPrinters() from opt, which increases the static
binary size from 50MB -> 52MB on my system (all backends compiled) and causes no
measurable increase in the time needed to run 'make check'.
llvm-svn: 210914
This code was never being used and any use of it would look fairly strange.
For example, it would try to map a object_error::parse_failed to
std::errc::invalid_argument.
llvm-svn: 210912
Previously there was a separate mode entirely (--hdis vs.
--disassemble). It makes a bit more sense for the immediate printing
style to be a flag for --disassmeble rather than an entirely different
thing.
llvm-svn: 210700
The idea of this patch is to turn llvm/Support/system_error.h into a
transitional header that just brings in the erorr_code api to the llvm
namespace. I will remove it shortly afterwards.
The cases where the general idea needed some tweaking:
* std::errc is a namespace in msvc, so we cannot use "using std::errc". I could
add an #ifdef, but there were not that many uses, so I just added std:: to
them in this patch.
* Template specialization had to be moved to the std namespace in this
patch set already.
* The msvc implementation of default_error_condition doesn't seem to
provide the same transformations as we need. Not too surprising since
the standard doesn't actually say what "equivalent" means. I fixed the
problem by keeping our old mapping and using it at error_code
construction time.
Despite these shortcomings I think this is still a good thing. Some reasons:
* The different implementations of system_error might improve over time.
* It removes 925 lines of code from llvm already.
* It removes 6313 bytes from the text segment of the clang binary when
it is built with gcc and 2816 bytes when building with clang and
libstdc++.
llvm-svn: 210687
Add a brief explanation of the data section layout for the unwind data that the
Windows on ARM EH models. This is simply to provide a rough idea of the layout
of the code involved in the decoding of the unwinding. Details on the involved
data structures are available in the associated support header. The bulk of it
is related to printing out the byte-code to help validate generation of WoA EH.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 210397
This is a first step in seeing if it is possible to make llvm-nm produce
the same output as darwin's nm(1). Darwin's default format is bsd but its
-m output prints the longer Mach-O specific details. For now I added the
"-format darwin" to do this (whos name may need to change in the future).
As there are other Mach-O specific flags to nm(1) which I'm hoping to add some
how in the future. But I wanted to see if I could get the correct output for
-m flag using llvm-nm and the libObject interfaces.
I got this working but would love to hear what others think about this approach
to getting object/format specific details printed with llvm-nm.
llvm-svn: 210285
Add support to llvm-readobj to decode Windows ARM Exception Handling data. This
uses the previously added datastructures to decode the information into a format
that can be used by tests. This is a necessary step to add support for emitting
Windows on ARM exception handling information.
A fair amount of formatting inspiration is drawn from the Win64 EH printer as
well as the ARM EHABI printer. This allows for a reasonably thorough look into
the encoded data.
llvm-svn: 210192