The internal `cl::opt` option --x86-asm-syntax sets the AsmParser and AsmWriter
dialect. The option is used by llc and llvm-mc tests to set the AsmWriter dialect.
This patch adds -M {att,intel} as GNU objdump compatible aliases (PR43413).
Note: the dialect is initialized when the MCAsmInfo is constructed.
`MCInstPrinter::applyTargetSpecificCLOption` is called too late and its MCAsmInfo
reference is const, so changing the `cl::opt` in
`MCInstPrinter::applyTargetSpecificCLOption` is not an option, at least without
large amount of refactoring.
Reviewed By: hoy, jhenderson, thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101695
When dumping multiple pieces of information (e.g. --all-headers),
there is sometimes no separator between two pieces.
This patch uses the "\nheader:\n" style, which generally improves
compatibility with GNU objdump.
Note: objdump -t/-T does not add a newline before "SYMBOL TABLE:" and "DYNAMIC SYMBOL TABLE:".
We add a newline to be consistent with other information.
`objdump -d` prints two empty lines before the first 'Disassembly of section'.
We print just one with this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101796
Previously printing R_386_RELATIVE relocations would trigger
`error: can't read an entry at 0x40: it goes past the end of the section (0x40)`
I found this while writing a test case for LLD (D100490).
This also includes some minor cleanup in the elf-dynamic-relcos.test
llvm-objdump test based on the newly added test.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100489
This is similar to D83530, but for llvm-objdump.
The motivation is the desire to add an `llvm-otool` symlink to
llvm-objdump that behaves like macOS's `otool`, using the same
technique the at llvm-objcopy uses to behave like `strip` (etc).
This change for the most part preserves behavior. In some cases,
it increases compatibility with GNU objdump a bit. For example,
the long options now require two dashes, and the long options
taking arguments for the most part now require a `=` in front
of the value. Exceptions are flags where tests passed the
value separately, for these the separate form is kept as
an alias to the = form.
The one-letter short form args are now joined or separate
and long longer accept a =, which also matches GNU objdump.
cl::opt<>s in libraries now have to be explicitly plumbed
through. This patch does that for --x86-asm-syntax=, but
there's hope that we can remove that again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100433
Clang spends a decent amount of time in the LineOffsetMapping::get(...)
function. This function used to be vectorized (through SSE2) then the
optimization got dropped because the sequential version was on-par performance
wise.
This provides an optimization of the sequential version that works on a word at
a time, using (documented) bithacks to provide a portable vectorization.
When preprocessing the sqlite amalgamation, this yields a sweet 3% speedup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99409
The option `--prefix-strip` is only used when `--prefix` is not empty.
It removes N initial directories from absolute paths before adding the
prefix.
This matches GNU's objdump behavior.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96679
Merging directories and files may produce different results on different
platforms.
Merging "./Inputs" and "source-interleave-x86_64.c" will use different
separators in POSIX and Windows.
Dedicated tests are needed for dealing with removing trailing separators
for POSIX (consider only '/') and Windows (consider '/' and '\').
Fixes D85024.
Fixes PR46368.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95513
Warnings have been added for three cases (PR41905): (1) missing debug info, (2)
the source file cannot be found, (3) the debug info points at a line beyond the
end of the file.
(1) is probably less useful. This was brought up once on
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-April/141264.html and two
internal users mentioned it to me that it was annoying. (I personally
find the warning confusing, too.)
Users specify --source to get additional information if sources happen to be
available. If sources are not available, it should be obvious as the output
will have no interleaved source lines. The warning can be especially annoying
when using llvm-objdump -S on a bunch of files.
This patch drops the warning when there is no debug info.
(If LLVMSymbolizer::symbolizeCode returns an `Error`, there will still be
an error. There is currently no test for an `Error` return value.
The only code path is probably a broken symbol table, but we probably already emit a warning
in that case)
`source-interleave-prefix.test` has an inappropriate "malformed" test - the test simply has no
.debug_* because new llc does not produce debug info when the filename is empty (invalid).
I have tried tampering the header of .debug_info/.debug_line but llvm-symbolizer does not warn.
This patch does not intend to add the missing test coverage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88715
For x86-64 the REX.w prefix takes precedence over any other size
override (i.e. 0x66). Therefore, for x86-64 when REX.w is present set
'hasOpSize' to false to ensure that any size override is ignored.
Fixes PR48901.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95682
Imagine we have a YAML declaration of few sections: `foo1`, `<unnamed 2>`, `foo3`, `foo4`.
To put them into segment we can do (1*):
```
Sections:
- Section: foo1
- Section: foo4
```
or we can use (2*):
```
Sections:
- Section: foo1
- Section: foo3
- Section: foo4
```
or (3*) :
```
Sections:
- Section: foo1
## "(index 2)" here is a name that we automatically created for a unnamed section.
- Section: (index 2)
- Section: foo3
- Section: foo4
```
It looks really confusing that we don't have to list all of sections.
At first I've tried to make this rule stricter and report an error when there is a gap
(i.e. when a section is included into segment, but not listed explicitly).
This did not work perfect, because such approach conflicts with unnamed sections/fills (see (3*)).
This patch drops "Sections" key and introduces 2 keys instead: `FirstSec` and `LastSec`.
Both are optional.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90458
The prefix given to --prefix will be added to GNU absolute paths when
used with --source option (source interleaved with the disassembly).
This matches GNU's objdump behavior.
GNU and C++17 rules for absolute paths are different.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85024
Fixes PR46368.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85024
When diffing disassembly dump of two binaries, I see lots of noises from mismatched jump target addresses and global data references, which unnecessarily causes diffs on every function, making it impractical. I'm trying to symbolize the raw binary addresses to minimize the diff noise.
In this change, a local branch target is modeled as a label and the branch target operand will simply be printed as a label. Local labels are collected by a separate pre-decoding pass beforehand. A global data memory operand will be printed as a global symbol instead of the raw data address. Unfortunately, due to the way the disassembler is set up and to be less intrusive, a global symbol is always printed as the last operand of a memory access instruction. This is less than ideal but is probably acceptable from checking code quality point of view since on most targets an instruction can have at most one memory operand.
So far only the X86 disassemblers are supported.
Test Plan:
llvm-objdump -d --x86-asm-syntax=intel --no-show-raw-insn --no-leading-addr :
```
Disassembly of section .text:
<_start>:
push rax
mov dword ptr [rsp + 4], 0
mov dword ptr [rsp], 0
mov eax, dword ptr [rsp]
cmp eax, dword ptr [rip + 4112] # 202182 <g>
jge 0x20117e <_start+0x25>
call 0x201158 <foo>
inc dword ptr [rsp]
jmp 0x201169 <_start+0x10>
xor eax, eax
pop rcx
ret
```
llvm-objdump -d **--symbolize-operands** --x86-asm-syntax=intel --no-show-raw-insn --no-leading-addr :
```
Disassembly of section .text:
<_start>:
push rax
mov dword ptr [rsp + 4], 0
mov dword ptr [rsp], 0
<L1>:
mov eax, dword ptr [rsp]
cmp eax, dword ptr <g>
jge <L0>
call <foo>
inc dword ptr [rsp]
jmp <L1>
<L0>:
xor eax, eax
pop rcx
ret
```
Note that the jump instructions like `jge 0x20117e <_start+0x25>` without this work is printed as a real target address and an offset from the leading symbol. With a change in the optimizer that adds/deletes an instruction, the address and offset may shift for targets placed after the instruction. This will be a problem when diffing the disassembly from two optimizers where there are unnecessary false positives due to such branch target address changes. With `--symbolize-operand`, a label is printed for a branch target instead to reduce the false positives. Similarly, the disassemble of PC-relative global variable references is also prone to instruction insertion/deletion.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84191
D63847 added `MCInstrAnalysis::evaluateMemoryOperandAddress()`. This patch
leverages the feature to print the target addresses for evaluable instructions.
```
-400a: movl 4080(%rip), %eax
+400a: movl 4080(%rip), %eax # 5000 <data1>
```
This patch also deletes `MIA->isCall(Inst) || MIA->isUnconditionalBranch(Inst) || MIA->isConditionalBranch(Inst)`
which is used to guard `MCInstrAnalysis::evaluateBranch()`
Reviewed By: jhenderson, skan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78776
Prior to this patch, llvm-objdump would only look in the last section
(according to the section header table order) that matched an address
for a symbol when identifying the target symbol of a call or branch
operation. If there are multiple sections with the same address, due to
some of them being empty, it did not look in those, even if the symbol
couldn't be found in the first section looked in.
This patch causes llvm-objdump to look in all sections for possible
candidate symbols. If there are multiple possible symbols, it picks one
from a non-empty section, if possible (as that is more likely to be the
"real" symbol since functions can't really be in emptiy sections),
before falling back to those in empty sections. If all else fails, it
falls back to absolute symbols as it did before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78549
Reviewed by: grimar, Higuoxing
Currently C++ symbols are demangled in the symbol table as well as in
the disassembly and relocations. This patch adds demangling of C++
symbols in targets of calls and branches making it easier to decipher
control flow in disassembly. This also matches up with GNUobjdump's
behavior
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77957
When two sections shared the same address, the disassembly code was
using pointer values when sorting (see the SectionRef less than
operator). Since those values aren't guaranteed to have a specific
order, this meant the disassembly code would sometimes change which
section to pick when finding symbols targeted by calls in fully linked
objects.
This change fixes the non-determinism, so that the same section is
always picked. This might have a negative impact in that now a section
without any symbol might be picked over a section with symbols, but this
will be addressed in a later commit.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45411.
Reviewed by: grimar, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77640
Summary:
This patch is to teach `llvm-objdump` dump dynamic symbols (`-T` and `--dynamic-syms`). Currently, this patch is not fully compatible with `gnu-objdump`, but I would like to continue working on this in next few patches. It has two issues.
1. Some symbols shouldn't be marked as global(g). (`-t/--syms` has same issue as well) (Fixed by D75659)
2. `gnu-objdump` can dump version information and *dynamically* insert before symbol name field.
`objdump -T a.out` gives:
```
DYNAMIC SYMBOL TABLE:
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_deregisterTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 DF *UND* 0000000000000000 GLIBC_2.2.5 printf
0000000000000000 DF *UND* 0000000000000000 GLIBC_2.2.5 __libc_start_main
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 __gmon_start__
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_registerTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 w DF *UND* 0000000000000000 GLIBC_2.2.5 __cxa_finalize
```
`llvm-objdump -T a.out` gives:
```
DYNAMIC SYMBOL TABLE:
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_deregisterTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 g DF *UND* 0000000000000000 printf
0000000000000000 g DF *UND* 0000000000000000 __libc_start_main
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 __gmon_start__
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_registerTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 w DF *UND* 0000000000000000 __cxa_finalize
```
Reviewers: jhenderson, grimar, MaskRay, espindola
Reviewed By: jhenderson, grimar
Subscribers: emaste, rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75756
```
// llvm-objdump -d output (before)
400000: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 11
400005: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 11
// llvm-objdump -d output (after)
400000: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 0x400010
400005: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 0x400015
// GNU objdump -d. The lack of 0x is not ideal because the result cannot be re-assembled
400000: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 400010
400005: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 400015
```
In llvm-objdump, we pass the address of the next MCInst. Ideally we
should just thread the address of the current address, unfortunately we
cannot call X86MCCodeEmitter::encodeInstruction (X86MCCodeEmitter
requires MCInstrInfo and MCContext) to get the length of the MCInst.
MCInstPrinter::printInst has other callers (e.g llvm-mc -filetype=asm, llvm-mca) which set Address to 0.
They leave MCInstPrinter::PrintBranchImmAsAddress as false and this change is a no-op for them.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76580
`PAddr` corresponds to `p_paddr` of a program header, which is the segment's physical
address for systems in which physical addressing is relevant. `p_paddr` is often equal
to `p_vaddr`, which is the virtual address of a segment.
This patch changes the default for `PAddr` from 0 to a value of `VAddr`.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76131
The new behavior matches GNU objdump. A pair of angle brackets makes tests slightly easier.
`.foo:` is not unique and thus cannot be used in a `CHECK-LABEL:` directive.
Without `-LABEL`, the CHECK line can match the `Disassembly of section`
line and causes the next `CHECK-NEXT:` to fail.
```
Disassembly of section .foo:
0000000000001634 .foo:
```
Bdragon: <> has metalinguistic connotation. it just "feels right"
Reviewed By: rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75713
This fixes several issues. The behavior changes are:
A SHN_COMMON symbol does not have the 'g' flag.
An undefined symbol does not have 'g' or 'l' flag.
A STB_GLOBAL SymbolRef::ST_Unknown symbol has the 'g' flag.
A STB_LOCAL SymbolRef::ST_Unknown symbol has the 'l' flag.
Reviewed By: rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75659
Summary:
GNU objdump prints the method name in disassembly output, and upon further investigation this seems to come from debug info, not the symbol table.
Some additional refactoring is necessary to make this work even when the line number is 0/the filename is unknown. The added test case includes a note for this scenario.
See http://llvm.org/PR41341 for more info.
Reviewers: dblaikie, MaskRay, jhenderson
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Subscribers: ormris, jvesely, aprantl, kerbowa, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74507
Summary:
GNU objdump prints the file format in lowercase, e.g. `elf64-x86-64`. llvm-objdump prints `ELF64-x86-64` right now, even though piping that into llvm-objcopy refuses that as a valid arch to use.
As an example of a problem this causes, see: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/779
Reviewers: MaskRay, jhenderson, alexshap
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Subscribers: tpimh, sbc100, grimar, jvesely, nhaehnle, kerbowa, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74433
Summary:
llvm-objdump -macho will no longer print "Contents of" headers when
disassembling section contents when -no-leading-headers is specified.
For historical reasons, this flag is independent of -no-leading-addr.
Reviewers: ab, pete, jhenderson
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Subscribers: rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73574
Summary:
llvm-objdump started warning when asked to disassemble a section that
isn't present in the input files, in Yuanfang Chen's change:
d16c162c94. The problem is that the
logic was restricted only to the generic llvm-objdump parser, not to the
Mach-O-specific parser used for Apple toolchain compatibility. The
solution is to log section names from the Mach-O parser.
The macho-cstring-dump.test has been updated to fail if it encounters
this new warning in the future.
Reviewers: pete, ab, lhames, jhenderson, grimar, MaskRay, ychen
Reviewed By: jhenderson, grimar
Subscribers: rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73586
To improve consistency and avoid unneeded shell feature (output
redirection).
While here, make other changes to improve consistency
--docnum 1 => --docnum=1
-docnum=x => --docnum=x
Mostly this adds testing for certain aliases in more explicit ways.
There are also a few tidy-ups, and additions of missing testing, where
the feature was either not tested at all, or not tested explicitly and
sufficiently.
Reviewed by: MaskRay, rupprecht, grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71116
Summary: Matches GNU objdump. Makes debugging easier for me as I'm working out addresses from symbol+addend, so it would be good to be calculating in a single format.
Reviewers: MaskRay, grimar, jhenderson, bd1976llvm
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Subscribers: sdardis, jrtc27, atanasyan, rupprecht, seiya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69997
llvm-objdump -D this file:
int a[100000];
int main() { return 0; }
Will produce an error: "The end of the file was unexpectedly encountered".
This happens because of a check in Binary.h checkOffset. (Addr + Size > M.getBufferEnd()).
The sh_offset and sh_size fields can be ignored for SHT_NOBITS sections.
Fix the error by changing ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::getSectionContents to use
the file base for SHT_NOBITS sections.
Reviewed By: grimar, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69192
It returns just a section_iterator currently and have a report_fatal_error call inside.
This change adds a way to return errors and handle them on caller sides.
The patch also changes/improves current users and adds test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69167
llvm-svn: 375408
Summary:
rL371826 rearranged some output from llvm-objdump for GNU objdump compatability, but there still seem to be some more.
I think this rearrangement is a little closer. Overview of the ordering which matches GNU objdump:
* Archive headers
* File headers
* Section headers
* Symbol table
* Dwarf debugging
* Relocations (if `--disassemble` is not used)
* Section contents
* Disassembly
Reviewers: jhenderson, justice_adams, grimar, ychen, espindola
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Subscribers: aprantl, emaste, arichardson, jrtc27, atanasyan, seiya, llvm-commits, MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68066
llvm-svn: 373671
The error reporting function are not consistent.
Before this change:
* They had inconsistent naming (e.g. 'error' vs 'report_error').
* Some of them reported the object name, others - dont.
* Some of them accepted the case when there was no error. (i.e. error code or Error had a success value).
This patch tries to cleanup it a bit.
It also renames report_error -> reportError, report_warning -> reportWarning
and removes a full stop from messages.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66418
llvm-svn: 369515