In the coverage report, the line and count columns have been swapped to make it more readable.
A follow-up commit in compiler-rt is needed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23281
llvm-svn: 278152
This enables users to export coverage information as portable JSON for use by
analysis tools and storage in document based databases.
The export sub-command is invoked just like the others:
llvm-cov export -instr-profile path/to/foo.profdata path/to/foo.binary
The resulting JSON contains a list of files and functions. Every file object
contains a list of segments, expansions, and a summary of the file's region,
function, and line coverage. Every function object contains the function's name
and regions. There is also a total summary for the entire object file.
Changes since the initial commit (r276813):
- Fixed the regexes in the tests to handle Windows filepaths.
Patch by Eddie Hurtig!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22651
llvm-svn: 276818
This enables users to export coverage information as portable JSON for use by
analysis tools and storage in document based databases.
The export sub-command is invoked just like the others:
llvm-cov export -instr-profile path/to/foo.profdata path/to/foo.binary
The resulting JSON contains a list of files and functions. Every file object
contains a list of segments, expansions, and a summary of the file's region,
function, and line coverage. Every function object contains the function's name
and regions. There is also a total summary for the entire object file.
Patch by Eddie Hurtig!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22651
llvm-svn: 276813
This makes the reader check the endianness of the object file its
given and behave appropriately. For the test I dug up a really old
linker and created a ppc-apple-darwin file for llvm-cov to read.
llvm-svn: 232422
This still doesn't actually work correctly for big endian input files,
but since these tests all use little endian input files they don't
actually fail. I'll be committing a real fix for big endian soon, but
I don't have proper tests for it yet.
llvm-svn: 232354
This code was casting regions of a memory buffer to a couple of
different structs. This is wrong in a few ways:
1. It breaks aliasing rules.
2. If the buffer isn't aligned, it hits undefined behaviour.
3. It completely ignores endianness differences.
4. The structs being defined for this aren't specifying their padding
properly, so this doesn't even represent the data properly on some
platforms.
This commit is mostly NFC, except that it fixes reading coverage for
32 bit binaries as a side effect of getting rid of the mispadded
structs. I've included a test for that.
I've also baked in that we only handle little endian more explicitly,
since that was true in practice already. I'll fix this to handle
endianness properly in a followup commit.
llvm-svn: 232346