Summary:
Even though the getDIEOffset offset function was common for the two
accelerator table implementations, it was doing two different things:
for the Apple tables, it was returning the die offset relative to the
start of the section, whereas for DWARF v5 tables, it was relative to
the start of the CU.
I resolve this by renaming the function to getDIESectionOffset to make
it obvious what the function returns, and change the DWARF
implementation to return the section offset. I also keep the CU-relative
accessor, but only in the DWARF implementation (there is no way to get
this information for the Apple tables). This was not caught by existing
tests because the hand-written inputs also erroneously used section
offsets instead of CU-relative ones.
While looking at this, I noticed that the Apple implementation was not
fully correct either -- the header contains a DIEOffsetBase field, which
should be added to offsets encoded with the DW_FORM_ref*** family, but
this was not being used. This went unnoticed because all current writers
set this field to zero anyway. I fix this as well and add a hand-written
test which demonstrates the issue.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44202
llvm-svn: 327116
Summary:
The args class is used in plenty of places (a lot of them in the lower lldb
layers) for representing a list of arguments, and most of these places don't
care about option parsing. Moving the option parsing out of the class removes
the largest external dependency (there are a couple more, but these are in
static functions), and brings us closer to being able to move it to the
Utility module).
The new home for these functions is the Options class, which was already used
as an argument to the parse calls, so this just inverts the dependency between
the two.
The functions are themselves are mainly just copied -- the biggest functional
change I've made to them is to avoid modifying the input Args argument (getopt
likes to permute the argument vector), as it was weird to have another class
reorder the entries in Args class. So now the functions don't modify the input
arguments, and (for those where it makes sense) return a new Args vector
instead. I've also made the addition of a "fake arg0" (required for getopt
compatibility) an implementation detail rather than a part of interface.
While doing that I noticed that ParseForCompletion function was recording the
option indexes in the shuffled vector, but then the consumer was looking up the
entries in the unshuffled one. This manifested itself as us not being able to
complete "watchpoint set variable foo --" (because getopt would move "foo" to
the end). Surprisingly all other completions (e.g. "watchpoint set variable foo
--w") were not affected by this. However, I couldn't find a comprehensive test
for command argument completion, so I consolidated the existing tests and added
a bunch of new ones.
Reviewers: davide, jingham, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43837
llvm-svn: 327110
Fixes PR36311.
See more detailed analysis in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36311.
isUniform() information is recomputed after LV started transforming the
underlying IR and that triggered an assert in SCEV.
From vectorizer's architectural perspective, such information, while
still useful in vector code gen, should not be recomputed after the
start of transforming the LLVM IR. Instead, we should collect and cache
such information during the analysis phase of LV and use the cached info
during code gen.
From the symptom perspective, this assert as it stands right now is not
very useful. Legality already rejected loops that would trigger the
assert. As such, commenting out the assert is NFC from vectorizer's
functionality perspective. On top of that, just above the assertion, we
check for unit-strided load/store or
gather scatter. Addresses can't be uniform below that check.
From vectorization theory point of view, we don't have to reject all
cases of stores to uniform addresses. Eventually, we should support
safe/profitable cases.
This patch resolves the issue by removing the useless assertion that is
invoking LAA's isUniform() that requires up-to-date DomTree ---- once
vector code gen starts modifying CFG, we don't have an up-to-date
DomTree.
Patch by Hideki Saito <hideki.saito@intel.com>.
llvm-svn: 327109
Move the DWARF syntax highlighting into support. This has several
advantages, most notably that this makes the WithColor RAII wrapper
available outside libDebugInfo. Furthermore, several projects all have
their own code for handling colored output. This provides a place to
centralize it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44215
llvm-svn: 327108
Simplify the dispatching for the personality routines. This really had
no test coverage previously, so add test coverage for the various cases.
This turns out to be pretty complicated as the various languages and
models interact to change personalities around.
You really should feel bad for the compiler if you are using exceptions.
There is no reason for this type of cruelty.
llvm-svn: 327105
Setting up the mapper part of the frontend framework for a clang-doc
tool. It creates a series of relevant matchers for declarations, and
uses the ToolExecutor to traverse the AST and extract the matching
declarations and comments. The mapper serializes the extracted
information to individual records for reducing and eventually doc
generation.
For a more detailed overview of the tool, see the design document on the
mailing list: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-December/056203.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41102
llvm-svn: 327102
This patch starts simplifying the handling of .symver.
For now it just moves the responsibility for creating an alias down to
the streamer. With that the asm streamer can pass a .symver unchanged,
which is nice since gas cannot parse "foo@bar = zed".
In a followup I hope to move the handling down to the writer so that
we don't need special hacks for avoiding breaking names with @@@ on
windows.
llvm-svn: 327101
mprotect() allows setting memory access flags similarly to mmap(),
causing similar security issues if these flags are needlessly broad.
Patch by David Carlier!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44250
llvm-svn: 327098
Implicit constructor conversions such as A a = B() are represented by
surrounding the constructor for B() with an ImplicitCastExpr of
CK_ConstructorConversion kind, similarly to how explicit constructor conversions
are surrounded by a CXXFunctionalCastExpr. Support this syntax pattern when
extracting the construction context for the implicit constructor that
performs the conversion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44051
llvm-svn: 327096
stuff. Activate it when an internal SDK is selected. Update the name of
the LDFLAGS to match the rest of the settings. Update the default arch for
ios builds.
llvm-svn: 327095
Previously we unpacked the even bytes of each input into the high byte of 16-bit elements then did an v8i16 arithmetic shift right by 8 bits to fill the upper bits of each word with sign bits. Then we did the v8i16 multiply and then masked to zero the upper 8-bits of each result. The similar was done for all the odd bytes. The results are then packed together with packuswb
Since we are masking each multiply result element to 8-bits, and those 8-bits are determined only by the lower 8-bits of each of the inputs, we don't need to fill the upper bits with sign bits. So we can just unpack into the low byte of each element and treat the upper bits as garbage. This is what gcc also does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44267
llvm-svn: 327093
There is no point in lowering a dbg.declare describing an alloca that
has volatile loads or stores as users, since the alloca cannot be
elided. Lowering the dbg.declare will result in larger debug info that
may also have worse coverage than just describing the alloca.
rdar://problem/34496278
llvm-svn: 327092
- Fix instruction mappings/listings for various intrinsics
This patch was made by Craig Flores
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41517
llvm-svn: 327090
There is a mailing list discussion re: r325927 about why this test fails
in the dsym variant. I've marked it skipped for now, until the issue is
resolved.
llvm-svn: 327089
1. Link against libpmenergy and pmsample unconditionally. It is available on
macOS 10.10 ("Yosemite") and newer. We're already linking against libcompression
unconditionally which is only available on macOS 10.11 & newer.
2. Change a few "sdk=macosx.internal"'s to sdk=macosx.
3. Clean up a few places where libcompression was being enabled inconsistently.
Note: the -DLLDB_ENERGY define is only set when building against the macosx.internal
SDK; it includes a header file that is not public. We link against the dylibs
unconditionally for simplicity.
llvm-svn: 327084
On Windows, if the substitution contains a back reference, it would
removed due to the replacement of the escape character in lit. Create a
helper class to avoid this which will simply ignore the replacement and
mark the substitution as having capture groups being referenced.
llvm-svn: 327082
This patch is a fix for PR36642.
While legalizing long vector types, make sure the smaller types get the
flags of the wider type.
bugzilla link: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36642
Change-Id: I0c2829639f094c862c10a6b51b342d4c2563e1fa
llvm-svn: 327079
from core files. I tested this against the couple of core files that were
getting errors about unknown thread flavors and it now produce the same output as
the Xcode otool-classic(1) tool. Since the core files are huge I didn’t include
them as test cases.
rdar://38216356
llvm-svn: 327077
We were effectively overriding an explicit '.file' directive with info
for the assembler source. That shouldn't happen.
Fixes PR36636.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44265
llvm-svn: 327073
Summary:
This patch adds the DW_AT_byte_size dwarf attribute to vectors.
This fixes PR21924
LLVM will round a vector up to the next alignable address, which can result in
the vector's representation in the object file being larger than what the
debugger will calculate via NumberOfElements * ElementSize. In such a case calling sizeof(MyVec) in the source will result in a different value than what a debugger might present. This situation can occur because LLVM permits non-power of two 'vector_size' attributes.
Reviewers: echristo, dexonsmith, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: probinson, aprantl, llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44048
llvm-svn: 327072