Summary:
This speeds up export "summary-only" execution by an order of magnitude or two,
depending on number of threads used for prepareFileReports execution.
Also includes minor refactoring for splitting render of summary and detailed data
in two independent methods.
Reviewers: vsk, morehouse
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42000
llvm-svn: 322397
There were a few places where outs() was being used
directly rather than the ScopedPrinter object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41370
llvm-svn: 322141
These indexes are useful because they are not always zero based and
functions and globals are referenced elsewhere by their index.
This matches what we already do for the type index space.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41877
llvm-svn: 322121
llc, opt, and clang can all autodetect the CPU and supported features. lli cannot as far as I could tell.
This patch uses the getCPUStr() and introduces a new getCPUFeatureList() and uses those in lli in place of MCPU and MAttrs.
Ideally, we would merge getCPUFeatureList and getCPUFeatureStr, but opt and llc need a string and lli wanted a list. Maybe we should just return the SubtargetFeature object and let the caller decide what it needs?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41833
llvm-svn: 322100
This change adds support in llvm-objcopy for GNU objcopy's --localize-hidden
option. This option changes every hidden or internal symbol into a local symbol.
llvm-svn: 321884
This is not a record type that clang currently generates,
but it is a record that is encountered in object files generated
by cl. This record is unusual in that it refers directly to
the string table instead of indirectly to the string table via
the FileChecksums table. Because of this, it was previously
overlooked and we weren't remapping the string indices at all.
This would lead to crashes in MSVC when trying to display a
variable whose debug info involved an S_FILESTATIC.
Original bug report by Alexander Ganea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41718
llvm-svn: 321883
Summary:
Add a method `OptTable::findNearest`, which allows users of OptTable to
check user input for misspelled options. In addition, have llvm-mt
check for misspelled options. For example, if a user invokes
`llvm-mt /oyt:foo`, the error message will indicate that while an
option named `/oyt:` does not exist, `/out:` does.
The method ports the functionality of the `LookupNearestOption` method
from LLVM CommandLine to libLLVMOption. This allows tools like Clang
and Swift, which do not use CommandLine, to use this functionality to
suggest similarly spelled options.
As room for future improvement, the new method as-is cannot yet properly suggest
nearby "joined" options -- that is, for an option string "-FozBar", where
"-Foo" is the correct option name and "Bar" is the value being passed along
with the misspelled option, this method will calculate an edit distance of 4,
by deleting "Bar" and changing "z" to "o". It should instead calculate an edit
distance of just 1, by changing "z" to "o" and recognizing "Bar" as a
value. This commit includes a disabled test that expresses this limitation.
Test Plan: `check-llvm`
Reviewers: yamaguchi, v.g.vassilev, teemperor, ruiu, jroelofs
Reviewed By: jroelofs
Subscribers: jroelofs, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41732
llvm-svn: 321877
Summary:
Local testing has demonstrated a great speed improvement, compare the following:
1) Existing version:
```
$ time llvm-cov show -format=html -output-dir=report -instr-profile=... ...
The tool has been launched: 00:00:00
Loading coverage data: 00:00:00
Get unique source files: 00:00:33
Creating an index out of the source files: 00:00:34
Going into prepareFileReports: 00:00:34
Going to emit summary information for each file: 00:28:55 <-- 28:21 min!
Going to emit links to files with no function: 00:28:55
Launching 32 threads for generating HTML files: 00:28:55
real 37m43.651s
user 112m5.540s
sys 7m39.872s
```
2) Multi-threaded version with 32 CPUs:
```
$ time llvm-cov show -format=html -output-dir=report -instr-profile=... ...
The tool has been launched: 00:00:00
Loading coverage data: 00:00:00
Get unique source files: 00:00:38
Creating an index out of the source files: 00:00:40
Going into prepareFileReports: 00:00:40
Preparing file reports using 32 threads: 00:00:40
# Creating thread tasks for the following number of files: 16422
Going to emit summary information for each file: 00:01:57 <-- 1:17 min!
Going to emit links to files with no function: 00:01:58
Launching 32 threads for generating HTML files: 00:01:58
real 11m2.044s
user 134m48.124s
sys 7m53.388s
```
Reviewers: vsk, morehouse
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: Dor1s, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41206
llvm-svn: 321871
Currently it's not possible to access MCSubtargetInfo from a TgtMCAsmBackend.
D20830 threaded an MCSubtargetInfo reference through
MCAsmBackend::relaxInstruction, but this isn't the only function that would
benefit from access. This patch removes the Triple and CPUString arguments
from createMCAsmBackend and replaces them with MCSubtargetInfo.
This patch just changes the interface without making any intentional
functional changes. Once in, several cleanups are possible:
* Get rid of the awkward MCSubtargetInfo handling in ARMAsmBackend
* Support 16-bit instructions when valid in MipsAsmBackend::writeNopData
* Get rid of the CPU string parsing in X86AsmBackend and just use a SubtargetFeature for HasNopl
* Emit 16-bit nops in RISCVAsmBackend::writeNopData if the compressed instruction set extension is enabled (see D41221)
This change initially exposed PR35686, which has since been resolved in r321026.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41349
llvm-svn: 321692
I have no clue how this was missed when symbol table support was added. This
change ensures that the visibility of symbols is preserved by default.
llvm-svn: 321681
This patch replaces a block of logic that was implemented using
CoreFoundations calls with functionally equivalent logic that makes use
of LLVM libraries.
llvm-svn: 321522
This change adds `printMipsGOT` and `printMipsPLT` methods to the
`DumpStyle` class and overrides them in the `GNUStyle` and `LLVMStyle`
descendants. To pass information about GOT/PLT layout into these
methods, the `MipsGOTParser` class has been extended to hold all
necessary data.
llvm-svn: 321253
borked by: rL284966 (see: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25730).
Previously, Interval was unsigned (see: CachePruning.h), replacing the type with std::chrono::seconds (which is signed) causes a regression in behaviour because the c-api intends negative values to translate to large positive intervals to *effectively* disable the pruning (see comments on: setCachePruningInterval()).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41231
llvm-svn: 321077
Before this patch, dwarfdump's lookup parameter only accepts unsigned.
Given that for many current platforms the load address already exceeds
unsigned (e.g. arm64 w/ 0x100000000), dwarfdump needs an unsigned long
long parameter.
Patch by: Dr. Michael 'Mickey' Lauer <mickey@vanille-media.de>
llvm-svn: 321064
This change adds support for adding progbits sections with contents from a file
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41212
llvm-svn: 321047
LLVM IR function names which disable mangling start with '\01'
(https://www.llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#identifiers).
When an identifier like "\01@abc@" gets dumped to MIR, it is quoted, but
only with single quotes.
http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2770814:
"The allowed character range explicitly excludes the C0 control block
allowed), the surrogate block #xD800-#xDFFF, #xFFFE, and #xFFFF."
http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2776092:
"All non-printable characters must be escaped.
[...]
Note that escape sequences are only interpreted in double-quoted scalars."
This patch adds support for printing escaped non-printable characters
between double quotes if needed.
Should also fix PR31743.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41290
llvm-svn: 320996
Overtime some non-clang formatted code has creeped into llvm-objcopy. This
patch fixes all of that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41262
llvm-svn: 320856
Summary:
llvm-objdump's Mach-O parser was updated in r306037 to display external
relocations for MH_KEXT_BUNDLE file types. This change extends the Macho-O
parser to display local relocations for MH_PRELOAD files. When used with
the -macho option relocations will be displayed in a historical format.
All tests are passing for llvm, clang, and lld. llvm-objdump builds without
compiler warnings.
rdar://35778019
Reviewers: enderby
Reviewed By: enderby
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41199
llvm-svn: 320832
This is a special code that indicates that it's a function id.
While I'm still not certain how to interpret these, we definitely
should *not* be using these values as indices into an array directly.
For now, when we encounter one of these, just print the numeric value.
llvm-svn: 320775
This is a Swift feature. The output stream for the index page and the source
HTML page is utf-8 now.
The next patch will add the HTML magic to properly render these characters in
the browser.
llvm-svn: 320725
Threading was disabled in r317263 because it broke a test in combination
with `-DLLVM_ENABLE_THREADS=OFF`. This was because a ThreadPool warning
was piped to llvm-dwarfdump which was expecting to read an object from
stdin.
This patch re-enables threading and fixes the offending test.
Unfortunately this required more than just moving the ThreadPool out of
the for loop because of the TempFile refactoring that took place in the
meantime.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41180
llvm-svn: 320601
Summary:
llvm-objdump's Mach-O parser was updated in r306037 to display external
relocations for MH_KEXT_BUNDLE file types. This change extends the Macho-O
parser to display local relocations for MH_PRELOAD files. When used with
the -macho option relocations will be displayed in a historical format.
rdar://35778019
Reviewers: enderby
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41061
llvm-svn: 320532
This patch removes the hard-coded check for DWARFv2 line tables. Now
dsymutil accepts line tables for DWARF versions 2 to 5 (inclusive).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41084
rdar://35968319
llvm-svn: 320469
Summary:
That allows to get the same data as produced by "llvm-cov report",
but in JSON format, which is better for further processing by end users.
Reviewers: vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41085
llvm-svn: 320435
The Debugify pass synthesizes debug info for IR. It's paired with a
CheckDebugify pass which determines how much of the original debug info
is preserved. These passes make it easier to create targeted tests for
debug info preservation.
Here is the Debugify algorithm:
NextLine = 1
for (Instruction &I : M)
attach DebugLoc(NextLine++) to I
NextVar = 1
for (Instruction &I : M)
if (canAttachDebugValue(I))
attach dbg.value(NextVar++) to I
The CheckDebugify pass expects contiguous ranges of DILocations and
DILocalVariables. If it fails to find all of the expected debug info, it
prints a specific error to stderr which can be FileChecked.
This was discussed on llvm-dev in the thread:
"Passes to add/validate synthetic debug info"
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40512
llvm-svn: 320202
Summary:
llvm-objdump's Mach-O parser was updated in r306037 to display external
relocations for MH_KEXT_BUNDLE file types. This change extends the Macho-O
parser to display local relocations for MH_PRELOAD files. When used with
the -macho option relocations will be displayed in a historical format.
rdar://35778019
Reviewers: enderby
Reviewed By: enderby
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40867
llvm-svn: 320166
This patch adds support for running the DWARF verifier on the linked
debug info files. If the -verify options is specified and verification
fails, dsymutil exists with abort with non-zero exit code. This behavior
is *not* enabled by default.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40777
llvm-svn: 320033
Most likely, this is not how we want to handle this in the long term. This
code should probably be in the Swift repo and somehow plugged into the
opt-viewer. This is still however very experimental at this point so I don't
want to over-engineer it at this point.
llvm-svn: 319902
We currently use target_link_libraries without an explicit scope
specifier (INTERFACE, PRIVATE or PUBLIC) when linking executables.
Dependencies added in this way apply to both the target and its
dependencies, i.e. they become part of the executable's link interface
and are transitive.
Transitive dependencies generally don't make sense for executables,
since you wouldn't normally be linking against an executable. This also
causes issues for generating install export files when using
LLVM_DISTRIBUTION_COMPONENTS. For example, clang has a lot of LLVM
library dependencies, which are currently added as interface
dependencies. If clang is in the distribution components but the LLVM
libraries it depends on aren't (which is a perfectly legitimate use case
if the LLVM libraries are being built static and there are therefore no
run-time dependencies on them), CMake will complain about the LLVM
libraries not being in export set when attempting to generate the
install export file for clang. This is reasonable behavior on CMake's
part, and the right thing is for LLVM's build system to explicitly use
PRIVATE dependencies for executables.
Unfortunately, CMake doesn't allow you to mix and match the keyword and
non-keyword target_link_libraries signatures for a single target; i.e.,
if a single call to target_link_libraries for a particular target uses
one of the INTERFACE, PRIVATE, or PUBLIC keywords, all other calls must
also be updated to use those keywords. This means we must do this change
in a single shot. I also fully expect to have missed some instances; I
tested by enabling all the projects in the monorepo (except dragonegg),
and configuring both with and without shared libraries, on both Darwin
and Linux, but I'm planning to rely on the buildbots for other
configurations (since it should be pretty easy to fix those).
Even after this change, we still have a lot of target_link_libraries
calls that don't specify a scope keyword, mostly for shared libraries.
I'm thinking about addressing those in a follow-up, but that's a
separate change IMO.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40823
llvm-svn: 319840
If a linked binary file contains a dynamic section, the GOT layout
defined by the dynamic section entries. In a statically linked file
the GOT is just a series of entries. This change teaches `llvm-readobj`
to print the GOT in that case. That provides a feature parity with GNU
`readelf`.
llvm-svn: 319616
CMake's generated installation scripts support `CMAKE_INSTALL_DO_STRIP`
to enable stripping the installed binaries. LLVM's build system doesn't
expose this option to the `install-` targets, but it's useful in
conjunction with `install-distribution`.
Add a new function to create the install targets, which creates both the
regular install target and a second install target that strips during
installation. Change the creation of all installation targets to use
this new function. Stripping doesn't make a whole lot of sense for some
installation targets (e.g. the LLVM headers), but consistency doesn't
hurt.
I'll make other repositories (e.g. clang, compiler-rt) use this in a
follow-up, and then add an `install-distribution-stripped` target to
actually accomplish the end goal of creating a stripped distribution. I
don't want to do that step yet because the creation of that target would
depend on the presence of the `install-*-stripped` target for each
distribution component, and the distribution components from other
repositories will be missing that target right now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40620
llvm-svn: 319480
This change adds support for the --only-keep option and the -j alias as well.
A common use case for these being used together is to dump a specific section's
data. Additionally the --keep option is added (GNU objcopy doesn't have this)
to avoid removing a bunch of things. This allows people to err on the side of
stripping aggressively and then to keep the specific bits that they need for
their application.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39021
llvm-svn: 319467
This patch implements `getBundleInfo`, which uses CoreFoundation to
obtain information about the CFBundle. This information is needed to
populate the Plist in the dSYM bundle.
This change only applies to darwin and is an NFC as far as other
platforms are concerned.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40244
llvm-svn: 319416
A couple of places in LLD were passing references to
TypeTableCollections around, which makes it hard to change the
implementation at runtime. However, these cases only needed to
iterate over the types in the collection, and TypeCollection
already provides a handy abstract interface for this purpose.
By implementing this interface, we can get rid of the need to
pass TypeTableBuilder references around, which should allow us
to swap the implementation at runtime in subsequent patches.
llvm-svn: 319345
Detects whether we have the Python modules (pygments, yaml) required by
opt-viewer and hooks this up to REQUIRES.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34129 (the lack of opt-viewer
testing).
It's also related to https://github.com/apple/swift/pull/12938 and the idea is
to expose LLVM_HAVE_OPT_VIEWER_MODULES to the Swift cmake.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40202
Fixes since the first commit:
1. Disable syntax highlighting as different versions of pygments generate
different HTML
2. Use llvm-cxxfilt from the build
llvm-svn: 319324
The motivation behind this patch is that future directions require us to
be able to compute the hash value of records independently of actually
using them for de-duplication.
The current structure of TypeSerializer / TypeTableBuilder being a
single entry point that takes an unserialized type record, and then
hashes and de-duplicates it is not flexible enough to allow this.
At the same time, the existing TypeSerializer is already extremely
complex for this very reason -- it tries to be too many things. In
addition to serializing, hashing, and de-duplicating, ti also supports
splitting up field list records and adding continuations. All of this
functionality crammed into this one class makes it very complicated to
work with and hard to maintain.
To solve all of these problems, I've re-written everything from scratch
and split the functionality into separate pieces that can easily be
reused. The end result is that one class TypeSerializer is turned into 3
new classes SimpleTypeSerializer, ContinuationRecordBuilder, and
TypeTableBuilder, each of which in isolation is simple and
straightforward.
A quick summary of these new classes and their responsibilities are:
- SimpleTypeSerializer : Turns a non-FieldList leaf type into a series of
bytes. Does not do any hashing. Every time you call it, it will
re-serialize and return bytes again. The same instance can be re-used
over and over to avoid re-allocations, and in exchange for this
optimization the bytes returned by the serializer only live until the
caller attempts to serialize a new record.
- ContinuationRecordBuilder : Turns a FieldList-like record into a series
of fragments. Does not do any hashing. Like SimpleTypeSerializer,
returns references to privately owned bytes, so the storage is
invalidated as soon as the caller tries to re-use the instance. Works
equally well for LF_FIELDLIST as it does for LF_METHODLIST, solving a
long-standing theoretical limitation of the previous implementation.
- TypeTableBuilder : Accepts sequences of bytes that the user has already
serialized, and inserts them by de-duplicating with a hash table. For
the sake of convenience and efficiency, this class internally stores a
SimpleTypeSerializer so that it can accept unserialized records. The
same is not true of ContinuationRecordBuilder. The user is required to
create their own instance of ContinuationRecordBuilder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40518
llvm-svn: 319198
Since this isn't a real header - it includes static functions and had
external linkage variables (though this change makes them static, since
that's what they should be) so can't be included more than once in a
program.
llvm-svn: 319082
GNU's --strip-all doesn't strip as aggressively as it could in general.
Currently llvm-objcopy copies the exact behavoir of GNU's --strip-all.
eu-strip is used as a drop in replacement for GNU strip/objcopy in many many
places without issue. eu-strip removes non-allocated sections and keeps
.gnu.warning* sections. Because --strip-all will likely be the most widely
used stripping option we should make --strip-all as aggressive as it can safely
be. Since we have evidence from eu-strip that this is a safe option we should
allow it. For those that might still have an issue afterwards I've added
--strip-all-gnu as an exact drop in replacement for GNU's --strip-all as well.
llvm-svn: 319071
The refactoring in r318407 transiently includes abi-breaking.h
which defines EnableABIBreakingChecks. This breaks my Debug
build because this fuzzer did not link in Support with the symbol.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40190
llvm-svn: 318553
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).
llvm-svn: 318490
It turns out this #include isn't used from Host.h anyway,
but by having it it causes circular include dependencies.
This issues only surfaced while I was working on a separate
patch, so I'm submitting this first so that it's independent
of the other, unrelated patch.
llvm-svn: 318489
Removes AllocateRWX, setWritable and setExecutable from sys::Memory and
standardizes on allocateMappedMemory / protectMappedMemory. The
allocateMappedMemory method is updated to request full permissions for memory
blocks so that they can be marked executable later.
llvm-svn: 318464
Summary:
This change introduces a `DynamicSymbols` field to the ELF specific YAML
supported by `yaml2obj` and `obj2yaml`. This grouping of symbols provides a way
to represent ELF dynamic symbols. The `DynamicSymbols` structure is identical to
the existing `Symbols`.
Reviewers: compnerd, jakehehrlich, silvas
Reviewed By: silvas
Subscribers: silvas, jakehehrlich, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39582
llvm-svn: 318433
This moves the file handling out of DwarfLinker.cpp.
This fixes what is at least an oddity if not a bug. DwarfLinker.cpp
was using ToolOutputFile, which uses RemoveFileOnSignal. The issue is
that dsymutil.cpp uses that too. It is now clear from the interface
that only dsymutil.cpp is responsible for creating and deleting files.
llvm-svn: 318334
The original -O binary implementation just copied segment data from the
object and dumped it into a file. This doesn't take into account any
operations performed on objects such as section removal. GNU objcopy has
some specific behavior that we'd also like to respect. For instance
using -O binary and -j <some_section> will dump <some_section> to a
file. This change implements GNU objcopy style -O binary to as close of
an approximation as I can determine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39713
llvm-svn: 318324
Summary:
This patch adds another failure mode for `validateCFIProtection(..)`, wherein any register that affects the indirect control flow instruction is clobbered to between the CFI-check and the instruction's execution.
Also includes a modification to make MCInstrDesc::hasDefOfPhysReg public.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: llvm-commits, pcc, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39820
llvm-svn: 318238
Allows users to view GraphResult objects in a DOT directed-graph format. This feature can be turned on through the --print-graphs flag.
Also enabled pretty-printing of instructions in output. Together these features make analysis of unprotected CF instructions much easier by providing a visual control flow graph.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc, vlad.tsyrklevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39819
llvm-svn: 318211
Clang implements the -finstrument-functions flag inherited from GCC, which
inserts calls to __cyg_profile_func_{enter,exit} on function entry and exit.
This is useful for getting a trace of how the functions in a program are
executed. Normally, the calls remain even if a function is inlined into another
function, but it is useful to be able to turn this off for users who are
interested in a lower-level trace, i.e. one that reflects what functions are
called post-inlining. (We use this to generate link order files for Chromium.)
LLVM already has a pass for inserting similar instrumentation calls to
mcount(), which it does after inlining. This patch renames and extends that
pass to handle calls both to mcount and the cygprofile functions, before and/or
after inlining as controlled by function attributes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39287
llvm-svn: 318195
I was being inconsistent with the way I was capitalizing help messages
for command line options. Additionally --remove-section wasn't using
value_desc even though it benefited from it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39978
llvm-svn: 318190
They don't actually change nay behaviour, as llvm-strings currently
checks the whole object without looking at individual sections anyway.
This allows using llvm-strings in a context that explicitly passes
the -a option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40020
llvm-svn: 318185
This change adds a new flag not present in GNU objcopy that we call
--strip-non-alloc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39926
llvm-svn: 318168
We haven't been supporting anything but ELF64LE since the start. Luckily
this was always accounted for and the change is pretty trivial. B35281
requests this change for ELF32LE. This change adds support for ELF32LE,
ELF64BE, and ELF32BE with all supported features that already existed
for ELF64LE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39977
llvm-svn: 318166
Many projects use this option. There are two ways to use it. You can
either a) Just use --strip-debug and keep the old file with debug
content or b) you can use --strip-debug, --only-keep-debug, and
--add-gnu-debuglink all in conjunction to create two separate files, the
stripped file and the debug file. --only-keep-debug is more complicated
than --strip-debug because it keeps the section headers without keeping
section contents. That's not really supported by llvm-objcopy at the
moment but I plan on adding it. So this change just supports a) and
options to support b) will come soon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39919
llvm-svn: 318094
This change adds a slightly less extreme form of stripping. It should
remove any section that starts with ".debug" and should remove any
symbol table or relocations. In general this strips out most of the
stuff you don't need to execute but leaves a number of things around.
This behavior has been designed to be compatible with GNU strip/objcopy
--strip-all so that anywhere you currently use --strip-all you should be
able to use llvm-objcopy as a drop in replacement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39769
llvm-svn: 318092
Also change some default cases into llvm_unreachable in
WindowsResourceCOFFWriter, to make it easier to find if they
are triggerd from within e.g. lld, which supported ARM64 earlier
than llvm-cvtres did.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39892
llvm-svn: 317942
Refactors the behaviour of building graphs out of FileAnalysis, allowing for analysis of the GraphResult by the callee without having to rebuild the graph. Means when we want to analyse the constructed graph (planned for later revisions), we don't do repeated work.
Also makes CFI verification in FileAnalysis now return an enum that allows us to differentiate why something failed, not just that it did/didn't fail.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: kcc, pcc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39764
llvm-svn: 317927
This change adds generic fuzzing tools capable of running libFuzzer tests on
any optimization pass or combination of them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39555
llvm-svn: 317883
Summary:
This change allows yaml input to control the order of implicitly added sections
(`.symtab`, `.strtab`, `.shstrtab`). The order is controlled by adding a
placeholder section of the given name to the Sections field.
This change is to support changes in D39582, where it is desirable to control
the location of the `.dynsym` section.
This reapplied version fixes:
1. use of a function call within an assert
2. failing lld test which has an unnamed section
3. incorrect section count when given an unnamed section
Additionally, one more test to cover the unnamed section failure.
Reviewers: compnerd, jakehehrlich
Reviewed By: jakehehrlich
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39749
llvm-svn: 317789
We've worked around bugs in the frontend by ignoring the count from
wrapped segments when a line has at least one region entry segment.
Those frontend bugs are now fixed, so it's time to regenerate the
checked-in covmapping files and remove the workaround.
llvm-svn: 317761
Adds the blacklist behaviour to llvm-cfi-verify. Now will calculate which lines caused expected failures in the blacklist and reports the number of affected indirect CF instructions for each blacklist entry.
Also moved DWARF checking after instruction analysis to improve performance significantly - unrolling the inlining stack is expensive.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: aprantl, pcc, kcc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39750
llvm-svn: 317743
Summary:
This change allows yaml input to control the order of implicitly added sections
(`.symtab`, `.strtab`, `.shstrtab`). The order is controlled by adding a
placeholder section of the given name to the Sections field.
This change is to support changes in D39582, where it is desirable to control
the location of the `.dynsym` section.
This reapplied version fixes:
1. use of a function call within an assert
2. failing lld test which has an unnamed section
Additionally, one more test to cover the unnamed section failure.
Reviewers: compnerd, jakehehrlich
Reviewed By: jakehehrlich
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39749
llvm-svn: 317646
Summary:
This change allows yaml input to control the order of implicitly added sections
(`.symtab`, `.strtab`, `.shstrtab`). The order is controlled by adding a
placeholder section of the given name to the Sections field.
This change is to support changes in D39582, where it is desirable to control
the location of the `.dynsym` section.
Reviewers: compnerd, jakehehrlich
Reviewed By: jakehehrlich
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39749
llvm-svn: 317622
Minimal tool to convert xray traces to Chrome's Trace Event Format.
Summary:
Make use of Chrome Trace Event format's Duration events and stack frame dict to
produce Json files that chrome://tracing can visualize from xray function call
traces. Trace Event format is more robust and has several features like
argument logging, function categorization, multi process traces, etc. that we
can add as needed. Duration events cover an important base case.
Part of this change is rearranging the code so that the TrieNode data structure
can be used from multiple tools and can carry parameterized baggage on the
nodes. I put the actual behavior changes in llvm-xray convert exclusively.
Exploring the trace of instrumented llc was pretty nifty if overwhelming.
I can envision this being very useful for analyzing contention scenarios or
tuning parameters like batch sizes in a producer consumer queue. For more
targeted traces likemthis, let's talk about how we want to approach trace
pruning.
Reviewers: dberris, pelikan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39362
llvm-svn: 317531
This class was split between libIR and libSupport, which breaks under
modular code generation. Move it into the one library that uses it,
ProfileData, to resolve this issue.
llvm-svn: 317366
Adds blacklist parsing behaviour for filtering results into four categories:
- Expected Protected: Things that are not in the blacklist and are protected.
- Unexpected Protected: Things that are in the blacklist and are protected.
- Expected Unprotected: Things that are in the blacklist and are unprotected.
- Unexpected Unprotected: Things that are not in the blacklist and are unprotected.
now can optionally be invoked with a second command line argument, which specifies the blacklist file that the binary was built with.
Current statistics for chromium:
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, pcc, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39525
llvm-svn: 317364
GNU binutils nm doesn't error out on this, and some projects' build
systems can end up doing that in some cases. Allowing that seems like
a better target than trying to avoid user projects passing multiple
-g parameters to $NM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39539
llvm-svn: 317301
The character gets uppercased into 'I' when it's a global symbol.
In GNU binutils, nm prints 'I' for symbols classified by
bfd_is_ind_section - which probably isn't exactly/only import
tables.
When building for win32, (some incarnations of?) libtool has got
rules that try to inspect linked libraries, and in order to
be sure that it is linking to a DLL import library as opposed to
a static library, it expects to find the string " I " in the output
of $NM when run on such an import library.
GNU binutils nm also flags all of the .idata$X chunks as 'i' (while
this patch only makes it set on .idata$2 and .idata$6) and also
flags __imp__function as 'I'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39540
llvm-svn: 317300
Just aligning segment offsets to segment alignment is incorrect and also
wastes more space than is needed. The requirement is that p_offset ==
p_addr modulo p_align *not* that p_offset == 0 modulo p_align. Generally
speaking we've been using p_addr == 0 modulo p_align. In fact yaml2obj
can't even produce a valid situation which causes llvm-objcopy to
produce incorrect results because alignment and offset were both
inherited from the sections the program header covers. This change fixes
this bad behavior in llvm-objcopy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39132
llvm-svn: 317284
The LLVM tools can be used as a replacement for binutils, in which case
it's convenient to create symlinks with the binutils names. Add support
for these symlinks in the build system. As with any other llvm tool
symlinks, the user can limit the installed symlinks by only adding the
desired ones to `LLVM_TOOLCHAIN_TOOLS`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39530
llvm-svn: 317272
Sometimes program headers have larger alignments than any of the
sections they contain. Currently yaml2obj can't produce such files. A
bug recently appeared in llvm-objcopy that failed in such a case. I'd
like to be able to add tests to llvm-objcopy for such cases.
This change adds an optional alignment parameter to program headers that
will be used instead of calculating the alignment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39130
llvm-svn: 317139
These include:
* Several functions for creating an LLVMDIBuilder,
* LLVMDIBuilderCreateCompileUnit,
* LLVMDIBuilderCreateFile,
* LLVMDIBuilderCreateDebugLocation.
Patch by Harlan Haskins.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32368
llvm-svn: 317135
This makes the command line options consistent with llvm-cov and
llvm-profdata, which both use `-num-threads` and `-j`.
This also addresses the conflict reported after landing D39355.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39496
llvm-svn: 317104
Summary: Help differentiate code and data by parsing DWARF information. This will reduce false positive rates where data is placed in executable sections and is mistakenly parsed as code, resulting in an inflation in the number of indirect CF instructions (and hence an inflation of the number of unprotected).
Also prints the DWARF line data around the region of each indirect CF instruction.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: probinson, llvm-commits, vlad.tsyrklevich, mgorny, aprantl, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38654
llvm-svn: 317050
This patch adds the --threads option to dsymutil to process
architectures in parallel. The feature is already present in the version
distributed with Xcode, but was not yet upstreamed.
This is NFC as far as the linking behavior is concerned. As threads are
used automatically, the current tests cover the change in
implementation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39355
llvm-svn: 316999
The Android relocation packing format is a more compact
format for dynamic relocations in executables and DSOs
that is based on delta encoding and SLEBs. An overview
of the format can be found in the Android source code:
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/bionic/+/refs/heads/master/tools/relocation_packer/src/delta_encoder.h
This patch implements relocation packing using that format.
This implementation uses a more intelligent algorithm for compressing
relative relocations than Android's own relocation packer. As a
result it can generally create smaller relocation sections than
that packer. If I link Chromium for Android targeting ARM32 I get a
.rel.dyn of size 174693 bytes, as compared to 371832 bytes with gold
and the Android packer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39152
llvm-svn: 316775
Patch by Robert Widmann.
Expose getters for MetadataType and TokenType publicly in the C API.
Discovered a need for these while trying to wrap the intrinsics API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38809
llvm-svn: 316762
Summary:
This upstreams a patch from the osxcross [1] toolchain.
It appears that llvm-dsymutil crashes at this place during GCC
bootstrap. Adding the check here seems reasonable, since it operates
on arbitrary input DWARF, not necessarily generated by the LLVM
toolchain, and it seems the un-mangled name need not necessarily exist.
Patch by Thomas Pöchtrager
[1] https://github.com/tpoechtrager/osxcross
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39336
llvm-svn: 316678
Add the option to lookup an address in the debug information and print
out the file, function, block and line table details.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38409
llvm-svn: 316619
Add a CFI protection check that is implemented by building a graph and inspecting the output to deduce if the indirect CF instruction is CFI protected. Also added the output of this instruction to printIndirectInstructions().
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc, pcc, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38428
llvm-svn: 316610
This is in preparation for testing lld's upcoming relocation packing
feature (D39152). I have verified that this implementation correctly
unpacks the relocations from a Chromium DSO built with gold and the
Android relocation packer for ARM32 and ARM64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39272
llvm-svn: 316543
We need to use a stable sort on instantiation and expansion sub-views to
produce consistent output. Fortunately, we've gotten lucky and the tests
have checks for the stable order.
This is needed to unblock D39245. Once that lands, we'll have better
test coverage for sort non-determinism.
llvm-svn: 316490
Probably due to a change of how some pass initializes its dependencies,
the -write-bitcode pass (Bitcode/Writer/BitcodeWriterPass.cpp) is not
initialized in opt anymore and therefore not usable with
opt -write-bitcode
Explicitly call initializeWriteBitcodePassPass() to make it available
in opt again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39223
llvm-svn: 316464
The type index is from the TPI stream, not the IPI stream. Fix the
dumper, fix type index discovery, and add a test in LLD.
Also improve the log message we emit when we fail to rewrite type
indices in LLD. That's how I found this bug.
llvm-svn: 316461
Implement a localised graph builder for indirect control flow
instructions. Main interface is through GraphBuilder::buildFlowGraph,
which will build a flow graph around an indirect CF instruction. Various
modifications to FileVerifier are also made to const-expose some members
needed for machine code analysis done by the graph builder.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc, pcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38427
llvm-svn: 316372
LineCoverageIterator makes it easy for clients of coverage data to
determine line execution counts for a file or function. The coverage
iteration logic is tricky enough that it really pays not to have
multiple copies of it. Hopefully having just one implementation in LLVM
will make the iteration logic easier to test, reuse, and update.
This commit is NFC but I've added a unit test to go along with it just
because it's easy to do now.
llvm-svn: 316141
llvm-cov tends to highlight too many regions because its policy is to
highlight all region entry segments. This can look confusing to users:
not all region entry segments are interesting and deserve highlighting.
Emitting these highlights only when the region count differs from the
line count is a more user-friendly policy.
llvm-svn: 316109
Instead of copying around the wrapped segment and the list of line
segments, just pass a reference to a LineCoverageStats object. This
simplifies the interface. It also makes an upcoming change to suppress
distracting highlights possible.
llvm-svn: 316108
llvm-cov typically doesn't highlight gap segments, but it should if the
gap occurs after an uncovered region in order to preserve continuity.
llvm-svn: 316107
Summary:
llvm-cfi-verify (D38379) introduced a potential build failure when compiling with `-DLLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON -DLLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON`. Specific versions of cmake seem to treat the `add_subdirectory()` rule differently. It seems as if old versions of cmake BFS these rules, adding them to the fringe for expansion later. Newer versions of cmake seem to immediately execute CMakeFiles that are present in this subdirectory.
If the subdirectory is expanded through the fringe, the globbing resultant from `llvm_add_implicit_projects()` from `cmake/modules/AddLLVM.cmake:1012` means that `tools/llvm-shlib/CMakeFile.txt` gets executed before `tools/llvm-cfi-verify/lib/CMakeFile.txt`. As the latter CMakeFile adds a new library, this expansion order means that the library files required the unit tests in `unittests/tools/llvm-cfi-verify/` are not present in the dynamic library. This causes unit tests to fail as the required functions can't be found.
This change now ensures that the libraries created by `llvm-cfi-verify` are statically linked into the unit tests. As `tools/llvm-cfi-verify/lib` no longer adds anything to `llvm-shlib`, there should be no concern about the order-of-compilation.
Reviewers: skatkov, pcc
Reviewed By: skatkov, pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc, pcc, aheejin, vlad.tsyrklevich, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39020
llvm-svn: 316059
In r315960, I accidentally assumed that the first line segment is
guaranteed to be the non-gap region entry segment (given that one is
present). It can actually be any segment on the line, and the test I
checked in demonstrates that.
llvm-svn: 315963
Gap areas make it possible to correctly determine when to use counts
from deferred regions. Before gap areas were introduced, llvm-cov needed
to use a heuristic to do this: it ignored counts from segments that
start, but do not end, on a line. This heuristic breaks down on a simple
example (see PR34962).
This patch removes the heuristic and picks counts from any region entry
segment which isn't a gap area.
llvm-svn: 315960
There were two copies of the logic needed to construct a line stats
object for each line in a range: this patch brings it down to one. In
the future, this will make it easier for IDE clients to display coverage
in-line in source editors. To do that, we just need to move the new
LineCoverageIterator class to libCoverage.
llvm-svn: 315789
Summary:
Documentation says that user can specify sources for both "show" and
"report" commands. "Show" command respects specified sources, but "report" does
not. It is useful to have both "show" and "report" generated for specified
sources. Also added tests to for both commands with sources specified.
Reviewers: vsk, kcc
Reviewed By: vsk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38860
llvm-svn: 315685
This patch adds timestamp verification for swiftmodule files. A new flag
is provided to allows us to disable this check in order to allow testing
of this feature.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38686
llvm-svn: 315684
Reverting to investigate layering effects of MCJIT not linking
libCodeGen but using TargetMachine::getNameWithPrefix() breaking the
lldb bots.
This reverts commit r315633.
llvm-svn: 315637
Summary:
As the first step to allow analysis and visualization of xray collected data,
allow using the llvm-xray stacks tool to emit a complete listing of stacks in
the format consumable by a flamegraph tool.
Possible follow up formats include chrome trace viewer format and sql load
files.
As a POC, I'm able to generate flamegraphs of an xray instrumented llc compiling
hello world.
Reviewers: dberris, pelikan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38650
llvm-svn: 315635
Merge LLVMTargetMachine into TargetMachine.
- There is no in-tree target anymore that just implements TargetMachine
but not LLVMTargetMachine.
- It should still be possible to stub out all the various functions in
case a target does not want to use lib/CodeGen
- This simplifies the code and avoids methods ending up in the wrong
interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38489
llvm-svn: 315633
Here we add a secondary option parser to llvm-isel-fuzzer (and provide
it for use with other fuzzers). With this, you can copy the fuzzer to
a name like llvm-isel-fuzzer=aarch64-gisel for a fuzzer that fuzzer
AArch64 with GlobalISel enabled, or fuzzer=x86_64 to fuzz x86, with no
flags required. This should be useful for running these in OSS-Fuzz.
Note that this handrolls a subset of cl::opts to recognize, rather
than embedding a complete command parser for argv[0]. If we find we
really need the flexibility of handling arbitrary options at some
point we can rethink this.
This re-applies 315545 using "=" instead of ":" as a separator for
arguments.
llvm-svn: 315557
It broke some tests on Windows:
Failing Tests (4):
LLVM :: tools/llvm-isel-fuzzer/execname-options.ll
LLVM :: tools/llvm-isel-fuzzer/missing-triple.ll
LLVM :: tools/llvm-isel-fuzzer/x86-empty-bc.ll
LLVM :: tools/llvm-isel-fuzzer/x86-empty.ll
> llvm-isel-fuzzer: Handle a subset of backend flags in the executable name
>
> Here we add a secondary option parser to llvm-isel-fuzzer (and provide
> it for use with other fuzzers). With this, you can copy the fuzzer to
> a name like llvm-isel-fuzzer:aarch64-gisel for a fuzzer that fuzzer
> AArch64 with GlobalISel enabled, or fuzzer:x86_64 to fuzz x86, with no
> flags required. This should be useful for running these in OSS-Fuzz.
>
> Note that this handrolls a subset of cl::opts to recognize, rather
> than embedding a complete command parser for argv[0]. If we find we
> really need the flexibility of handling arbitrary options at some
> point we can rethink this.
llvm-svn: 315554
Here we add a secondary option parser to llvm-isel-fuzzer (and provide
it for use with other fuzzers). With this, you can copy the fuzzer to
a name like llvm-isel-fuzzer:aarch64-gisel for a fuzzer that fuzzer
AArch64 with GlobalISel enabled, or fuzzer:x86_64 to fuzz x86, with no
flags required. This should be useful for running these in OSS-Fuzz.
Note that this handrolls a subset of cl::opts to recognize, rather
than embedding a complete command parser for argv[0]. If we find we
really need the flexibility of handling arbitrary options at some
point we can rethink this.
llvm-svn: 315545
This reverts commit 4e4ee1c507e2707bb3c208e1e1b6551c3015cbf5.
This is failing due to some code that isn't built on MSVC
so I didn't catch. Not immediately obvious how to fix this
at first glance, so I'm reverting for now.
llvm-svn: 315536
MCObjectStreamer owns its MCCodeEmitter -- this fixes the types to reflect that,
and allows us to remove the last instance of MCObjectStreamer's weird "holding
ownership via someone else's reference" trick.
llvm-svn: 315531
There's a lot of misuse of Twine scattered around LLVM. This
ranges in severity from benign (returning a Twine from a function
by value that is just a string literal) to pretty sketchy (storing
a Twine by value in a class). While there are some uses for
copying Twines, most of the very compelling ones are confined
to the Twine class implementation itself, and other uses are
either dubious or easily worked around.
This patch makes Twine's copy constructor private, and fixes up
all callsites.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38767
llvm-svn: 315530
Summary: Move llvm-cfi-verify into a class in preparation for CFI analysis to come.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, pcc, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38379
llvm-svn: 315504
Previously we would only look in the current directory for a
resource, which might not be the same as the directory of the
rc file. Furthermore, MSVC rc supports a /I option, and can
also look in the system environment. This patch adds support
for this search algorithm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38740
llvm-svn: 315499
ubsan caught an issue I made where I was converting a null pointer to a
reference.
elf utils implements a particularly extreme form of stripping that I'd
like to support. eu-strip has an option called "strip-sections" that
removes all section headers and leaves only program headers and the
segment data. I have implemented this option partly as a test but mainly
because in Fuchsia we would like to use this option to minimize the size
of our executables. The other strip options that are on my list include
--strip-all and --strip-debug. This is a preliminary implementation that
I'd like to start using in Fuchsia builds if possible. This change
implements such a stripping option for llvm-objcopy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38335
llvm-svn: 315484
This patch adds timestamp verification for swiftmodule files.
- A new flag is provided to allows us to continue testing of the code
for embedding the__swift_ast. (git doesn't maintain timestamps)
- Adds a new test for fat (arm) binaries.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38686
llvm-svn: 315456
elf utils implements a particularly extreme form of stripping that I'd
like to support. eu-strip has an option called "strip-sections" that
removes all section headers and leaves only program headers and the
segment data. I have implemented this option partly as a test but mainly
because in Fuchsia we would like to use this option to minimize the size
of our executables. The other strip options that are on my list include
--strip-all and --strip-debug. This is a preliminary implementation that
I'd like to start using in Fuchsia builds if possible. This change
implements such a stripping option for llvm-objcopy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38335
llvm-svn: 315412
MCObjectStreamer owns its MCAsmBackend -- this fixes the types to reflect that,
and allows us to remove another instance of MCObjectStreamer's weird "holding
ownership via someone else's reference" trick.
llvm-svn: 315410
This change adds the ability to use the "-R"/"-remove-section" option
multiple times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38332
llvm-svn: 315385
If a Section had Type SHT_STRTAB (which could happen if you had a
.dynstr section) it was possible to cast Section to StringTableSection
and get away with any operation that was supported by SectionBase
without it being noticed. This change makes this bug easier to notice
and fixes it where it occurred. It also made me realize that there was
some duplication of efforts in the loop that calls ::initialize. These
issues are all fixed by this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38329
llvm-svn: 315372
This reverts commit r315363. It has a simple build failure, but more
importantly I want to confirm that unit tests run in check-all to make
sure that they don't silently break in the future.
llvm-svn: 315370
Summary: Move llvm-cfi-verify into a class in preparation for CFI analysis to come.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, pcc, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38379
llvm-svn: 315363
Summary:
D36624 added some python3 compatibility. But that fix has a problem..
With python2 (which is specified by `#!/usr/bin/env python2.7`), if the env variables do not specify the UTF8,
and the source file is UTF8 (contains non-ASCII symbols), then the `.decode('utf-8')` causes the following exception:
```
Reading YAML files...
Rendering HTML files...
8 of 41Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/build/llvm/tools/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 277, in <module>
print_progress)
File "/build/llvm/tools/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 213, in generate_report
should_print_progress)
File "/build/llvm/tools/opt-viewer/optpmap.py", line 45, in pmap
result = map(_wrapped_func, func_and_args, *args, **kwargs)
File "/build/llvm/tools/opt-viewer/optpmap.py", line 25, in _wrapped_func
return func(argument)
File "/build/llvm/tools/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 174, in _render_file
SourceFileRenderer(source_dir, output_dir, filename).render(remarks)
File "/build/llvm/tools/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 125, in render
self.render_source_lines(self.source_stream, line_remarks)
File "/build/llvm/tools/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 79, in render_source_lines
</tr>'''.format(**locals()), file=self.stream)
UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character u'\xf4' in position 47: ordinal not in range(128)
```
This is similar to https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33548, which was fixed by https://reviews.llvm.org/D37661
Unlike that fix, here, *removing* `.decode('utf-8')` actually fixes it.
Since i assume that the original fix is needed, i simply made
that fix conditional, since for python2 it actually breaks things.
Reviewers: modocache, anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: fhahn, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38289
llvm-svn: 315350
This change adds support for removing sections using the -R field (as
GNU objcopy does as well). This change should let us add many helpful
tests and is a proper stepping stone for adding more general kinds of
stripping.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38260
llvm-svn: 315346
Some functions were taking Twine's not by const&, these are all
fixed to take by const&. We also had a case where some functions
were overloaded to accept by const& and &&. Now there is only
one version which accepts by value and move's the value.
llvm-svn: 315229
Summary:
swiftc emits symbols without flags set, which led dsymutil to ignore
them when searching for global symbols, causing dwarf location data
to be omitted. Xcode's dsymutil handles this case correctly, and emits
valid location data. Add this functionality to llvm-dsymutil by
allowing parsing of symbols with no flags set.
Reviewers: aprantl, friss, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38587
llvm-svn: 315218
This allows rc files to have comments. Eventually we should
just use clang's c preprocessor, but that's a bit larger
effort for minimal gain, and this is straightforward.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38651
llvm-svn: 315207
This allows the escape sequences (\a, \n, \r, \t, \\, \x[0-9a-f]*,
\[0-7]*, "") to appear in .rc scripts. These are parsed and output in
the same way as it's done in original MS implementation.
The way these sequences are processed depends on the type of the
resource it resides in, and on whether the user declared the string to
be "wide" or "narrow".
I tried to maintain the maximum compatibility with the original tool
(and fail in some erroneous situations that are accepted by .rc).
However, there are some (extremely rare) cases where Microsoft tool
outputs nonsense. I found it infeasible to detect such casses.
Patch by Marek Sokolowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38426
llvm-svn: 315118
This allows rc to serialize user-defined resources, as
documented at:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381054.aspx
Escape sequences are yet unavailable, and are to be added in one of
child patches.
Patch by: Marek Sokolowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38423
llvm-svn: 315117
This allows llvm-rc to serialize STRINGTABLE resources.
These are output in an unusual way: we locate them at the end of the
file, and strings are merged into bundles of max 16 strings, depending
on their IDs, language, and characteristics.
Ref: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381050.aspx
Patch by: Marek Sokolowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38420
llvm-svn: 315112
This is now able to dump VERSIONINFO resources.
Ref: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381058.aspx
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38410
Patch by: Marek Sokolowski
llvm-svn: 315110
This is part 6 of llvm-rc serialization.
This adds ability to output cursors and icons as resources.
Unfortunately, we can't just copy .cur or .ico files to output - as each
file might contain multiple images, each of them needs to be unpacked
and stored as a separate resource. This forces us to parse cursor and
icon contents. (Fortunately, these formats are pretty similar and can be
processed by mostly common code).
As test files are binary, here is a short explanation of .cur and .ico
files stored:
cursor.cur, cursor-8.cur, cursor-32.cur are sample correct cursor files,
differing in their bit depth.
icon-old.ico, icon-new.ico are sample correct icon files;
icon-png.ico is a sample correct icon file in PNG format (instead of
usual BMP);
cursor-eof.cur is an incorrect cursor file - this is cursor.cur with
some of its final bytes removed.
cursor-bad-offset.cur is an incorrect cursor file - image header states
that image data begins at offset 0xFFFFFFFF.
Sample correct cursors and icons were created by Nico Weber.
Patch by Marek Sokolowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37878
llvm-svn: 315109
This is part 5 of llvm-rc serialization support.
This allows DIALOG and DIALOGEX to serialize if dialog-specific optional
statements are provided. These are (as of now): CAPTION, FONT, and
STYLE.
Notably, FONT statement can take more than two arguments when describing
DIALOGEX resources (as in
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa381013.aspx). I made
some changes to the parser to reflect this fact.
Patch by Marek Sokolowski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37864
llvm-svn: 315104
At the last LLVM dev meeting we had a debug info for optimized code
BoF session. In that session I presented some graphs that showed how
the quality of the debug info produced by LLVM changed over the last
couple of years. This is a cleaned up version of the patch I used to
collect the this data. It is implemented as an extension of
llvm-dwarfdump, adding a new --statistics option. The intended
use-case is to automatically run this on the debug info produced by,
e.g., our bots, to identify eyebrow-raising changes or regressions
introduced by new transformations that we could act on.
In the current form, two kinds of data are being collected:
- The number of variables that have a debug location versus the number
of variables in total (this takes into account inlined instances of
the same function, so if a variable is completely missing form only
one instance it will be found).
- The PC range covered by variable location descriptions versus the PC
range of all variables' containing lexical scopes.
The output format is versioned and extensible, so I'm looking forward
to both bug fixes and ideas for other data that would be interesting
to track.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36627
llvm-svn: 315101
Summary:
swiftc emits symbols without flags set, which led dsymutil to ignore
them when searching for global symbols, causing dwarf location data
to be omitted. Xcode's dsymutil handles this case correctly, and emits
valid location data. Add this functionality to llvm-dsymutil by
allowing parsing of symbols with no flags set.
Reviewers: aprantl, friss, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38587
llvm-svn: 315082
Summary:
xar_open and xar_iter_new require manual calls to close/free functions
to deallocate resources. This makes it easy to introduce memory leaks,
so add RAII struct wrappers for these resources.
Reviewers: enderby, rafael, compnerd, lhames, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38598
llvm-svn: 315069
Summary:
Xcode's dsymutil emits a __swift_ast DWARF section, which is required for debugging,
and which contains a byte-for-byte dump of the swiftmodule file.
Add this feature to llvm-dsymutil.
Tested with `gobjdump --dwarf=info -s`, by verifying that the contents of
`__DWARF.__swift_ast` match between Xcode's dsymutil and llvm-dsymutil
(Xcode's dwarfdump and llvm-dwarfdump don't currently recognize the
__swift_ast section).
Reviewers: aprantl, friss
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38504
llvm-svn: 315066
Summary:
Xcode's dsymutil emits a __swift_ast DWARF section, which is required for debugging,
and which contains a byte-for-byte dump of the swiftmodule file.
Add this feature to llvm-dsymutil.
Tested with `gobjdump --dwarf=info -s`, by verifying that the contents of
`__DWARF.__swift_ast` match between Xcode's dsymutil and llvm-dsymutil
(Xcode's dwarfdump and llvm-dwarfdump don't currently recognize the
__swift_ast section).
Reviewers: aprantl, friss
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38504
llvm-svn: 315014
Summary:
Xcode's dsymutil emits a __swift_ast DWARF section, which is required for debugging,
and which contains a byte-for-byte dump of the swiftmodule file.
Add this feature to llvm-dsymutil.
Tested with `gobjdump --dwarf=info -s`, by verifying that the contents of
`__DWARF.__swift_ast` match between Xcode's dsymutil and llvm-dsymutil
(Xcode's dwarfdump and llvm-dwarfdump don't currently recognize the
__swift_ast section).
Reviewers: aprantl, friss
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38504
llvm-svn: 315004
Adds the option 'new-pass-manager' to the gold pluggin to enable using the
new pass manager during the lto/thinlto link step.
Patch by Graham Yiu.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38517
llvm-svn: 314963
But now include a check for CPU_COUNT so we still build on 10 year old
versions of glibc.
Original message:
Use sched_getaffinity instead of std:🧵:hardware_concurrency.
The issue with std:🧵:hardware_concurrency is that it forwards
to libc and some implementations (like glibc) don't take thread
affinity into consideration.
With this change a llvm program that can execute in only 2 cores will
use 2 threads, even if the machine has 32 cores.
This makes benchmarking a lot easier, but should also help if someone
doesn't want to use all cores for compilation for example.
llvm-svn: 314931
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D38138.
I fixed the capitalization of some functions because we're changing those
lines anyway and that helped verify that we weren't accidentally dropping
any options by using default param values.
llvm-svn: 314930
Summary:
This reverts D38481. The change breaks systems with older versions of glibc. It
injects a use of CPU_COUNT() from sched.h without checking to ensure that the
function exists first.
Reviewers:
Subscribers:
llvm-svn: 314922
Somehow a few massive errors slipped though the cracks of testing.
1. The code in Segment::finalize was left over from the old layout
algorithm. In certain situations this would cause very strange issues
with segment layout. For instance in the shift-segments.test case it
would cause the second segment to have the same offset as the first.
2. In debugging this I discovered another issue. Namely section alignment
was not being computed based on Section->Align but instead
Section->Offset which is bizarre and makes no sense. I have no clue how
it worked in the first place. This issue is also fixed
3. Fixing #2 exposed a bug where things were not being written past the end
of the file that technically should have been. This was because in
certain cases (like overlapping-segments) the end of the file wouldn't
always be bumped if the offset could be chosen relative to an existing
segment that already had it's offset chosen. For fully nested segments
this is fine but for overlapping segments this leaves the end of the
file short. So I changed how the offset is bumped when looping though
segments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38436
llvm-svn: 314918