- getCompression() used to return a PDB_SourceCompression even though
the docs for IDiaInjectedSource are explicit about the return value
being compiler-dependent. Return an uint32_t instead, and make the
printing code handle unknown values better by printing "Unknown" and
the int value instead of not printing any compression.
- Print compressed contents as hex dump, not as string.
- Add compression type "DotNet", which is used (at least) by csc.exe,
the C# compiler. Also add a lengthy comment describing the stream
contents (derived from looking at the raw hex contents long enough
to see the GUIDs, which led me to the roslyn and mono implementations
for handling this).
- The native injected source dumper was dumping the contents of the
whole data stream -- but csc.exe writes a stream that's padded with
zero bytes to the next 512 boundary, and the dia api doesn't display
those padding bytes. So make NativeInjectedSource::getCode() do the
same thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64879
llvm-svn: 366386
These tests that failed on Darwin but passed on other machines due to the default archive format differing
on a Darwin machine, and what looks to be bugs in the output of this format.
I can not investigate these issue further so the tests are considered expected failures on Darwin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64802
llvm-svn: 366334
Some more tests to increase llvm-ar test coverage, this time for replace 'r' and update 'u'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64803
llvm-svn: 366309
`pretty -native -injected-sources -injected-source-content` works with
this patch, and produces identical output to the dia version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64428
llvm-svn: 366236
This change adds tests to cover existing llvm-ar functionality.
print.test is omitted due to failing on Darwin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64330
llvm-svn: 366209
When e_shstrndx is broken, it is impossible to get a section name.
In this patch I improved the error message we show and
added tests for Object and for llvm-readelf/llvm-readobj
Message was changed in two places:
1) llvm-readelf/llvm-readobj previously used a code from Object/ELF.h,
now they have a modified version of it (it has less checks and allows
dumping broken things).
2) Code in Object/ELF.h is still used for generic cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64714
llvm-svn: 366203
Creates universal binary output file from input files. Currently uses
hard coded value for alignment. Want to get the create functionality
approved before implementing the alignment function.
Patch by Anusha Basana <anusha.basana@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64102
llvm-svn: 366142
No changes, LLD code was updated in r366057.
Original commit message:
ELF.h contains two getSymbol methods
which seems to be used only from obj2yaml.
One of these methods calls another, which in turn
contains untested error message which doesn't
provide enough information.
Problem is that after improving only just that message,
obj2yaml will not show it,
("Error reading file: yaml: Invalid data was
encountered while parsing the file" message will be shown instead),
because internal errors handling of tool is based on ErrorOr<> class which
stores a error code and as a result can only show a predefined error string, what
actually isn't very useful.
In this patch, I rework obj2yaml's error reporting system
for ELF targets to use Error Expected<> classes.
Also, I improve the error message produced
by getSymbol for demonstration of the new functionality.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64631
llvm-svn: 366058
ELF.h contains two getSymbol methods
which seems to be used only from obj2yaml.
One of these methods calls another, which in turn
contains untested error message which doesn't
provide enough information.
Problem is that after improving only just that message,
obj2yaml will not show it,
("Error reading file: yaml: Invalid data was
encountered while parsing the file" message will be shown instead),
because internal errors handling of tool is based on ErrorOr<> class which
stores a error code and as a result can only show a predefined error string, what
actually isn't very useful.
In this patch, I rework obj2yaml's error reporting system
for ELF targets to use Error Expected<> classes.
Also, I improve the error message produced
by getSymbol for demonstration of the new functionality.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64631
llvm-svn: 366052
test/Object is not correct place to have tests that check obj2yaml
functionality, because we have test/tools/obj2yaml folder for that.
In this patch I merged a few test cases with their YAMLs from Inputs
folder, converted one of binary inputs and moved them to
tools/obj2yaml folder.
There are still another tests that might need the same, so it is initial step.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64555
llvm-svn: 365891
Summary: This moves away from defaulting to a.out and uses stdin only if stdin has a file redirected to it. This has been discussed on the llvm-dev mailing list [[ https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133642.html | here ]].
Reviewers: jhenderson, rupprecht, MaskRay, chrisjackson
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64290
llvm-svn: 365889
This patch improves the error messages reported for
note sections and phdrs and also makes a cleanup for
existent test case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64470
llvm-svn: 365884
This patch improves the error messages reported for
note sections and phdrs and also makes a cleanup for
existent test case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64470
llvm-svn: 365775
There is no way to set broken sh_size field currently
for sections. It can be usefull for writing the
test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64401
llvm-svn: 365766
It does not make sence to stop dumping the object if the broken
dynamic section was found. In this patch I changed the behavior from
"report an error" to "report a warning". This matches GNU.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64472
llvm-svn: 365762
There is currently an EPERM error when a regular user executes `llvm-objcopy a.o /dev/null`.
Worse, root can even change the mode bits of /dev/null.
Fix it by checking if the output file is special.
A new overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions with FD as the parameter
is added. Users should provide `perm & ~umask` as the parameter if they
intend to respect umask.
The existing overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions may be deleted if
we can find an implementation of fchmod() on Windows. fchmod() is
usually better than chmod() because it saves syscalls and can avoid race
condition.
Reviewed By: jakehehrlich, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64236
llvm-svn: 365753
This reverts r365193 (git commit 194f16b354)
This patch doesn't work with binaries built w/ `--emit-relocs`, e.g.
```
$ echo 'int main() { return 0; }' | clang -Wl,--emit-relocs -x c - -o foo && llvm-objcopy --strip-unneeded foo
llvm-objcopy: error: 'foo': not stripping symbol '__gmon_start__' because it is named in a relocation
```
llvm-svn: 365712
Adds a readobj dumper for 32-bit and 64-bit section header tables, and extend
support for the file-header dumping to include 64-bit object files. Also
refactors the binary file parsing to be done in a helper function in an attempt
to cleanup error handeling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63843
llvm-svn: 365524
Dump the DWARF information about call sites and call site parameters into
debug info sections.
The patch also provides an interface for the interpretation of instructions
that could load values of a call site parameters in order to generate DWARF
about the call site parameters.
([13/13] Introduce the debug entry values.)
Co-authored-by: Ananth Sowda <asowda@cisco.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikola Prica <nikola.prica@rt-rk.com>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Baev <ibaev@cisco.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60716
llvm-svn: 365467
Currently llvm-profdata does not expect the same file name for the input profile
and the output profile.
>llvm-profdata merge A.profraw B.profraw -o B.profraw
The above command runs successfully but the resulted B.profraw is not correct.
This patch fixes the issue by moving the initialization of writer after loading
the profile.
For the show command, the following will report a confusing error of
"Empty raw profile file":
>llvm-profdata show B.profraw -o B.profraw
It's harder to fix as we need to output something before loading the input profile.
I don't think that a fix for this is worth the effort. I just make the error explicit for
the show command.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64360
llvm-svn: 365386
Currently, the symbolizer lib can only symbolize a file on disk.
This patch teaches the symbolizer lib to symbolize objects.
llvm-objdump needs this to support archive disassembly with source info.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41871
Reviewed by: jhenderson, grimar, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63521
llvm-svn: 365376
This patch removes trivial-object-test.elf-i386,
trivial-object-test.elf-x86-64 and trivial-object-test2.elf-x86-64
precompiled objects from test/Object/Inputs folder.
I adjusted the existent test cases to use YAML instead.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64206
llvm-svn: 365348
The errors coming from ELF.h are usually not very
useful because they are uninformative. This patch is a
first step to improve the situation.
I tested this patch with a run of check-llvm and found
that few messages are untested. In this patch, I did not
add more tests but marked all such cases with a "TODO" comment.
For all tested messages I extended the error text to
provide more details (see test cases changed).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64014
llvm-svn: 365183
Added array of valid architectures and function returning array.
Modified llvm-lipo to include list of valid architectures in error message for invalid arch.
Patch by Anusha Basana <anusha.basana@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63735
llvm-svn: 365099
This reverts commit 250015bacf.
r365039 was re-commit of D63197 and failed on Mac. Reid XFAIL'd it, but I'd rather jsut revert and have it fixed properly.
llvm-svn: 365084
This reapplies 363232 that was reverted due to a buildbot test failure, this build bot has now been fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63197
llvm-svn: 365039
Mac Catalyst is a new MachO platform in macOS Catalina.
It always uses the build_version MachO load command.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64107
llvm-svn: 364981
The recent change to the BitStream reader error handling in r364464
changed the error message format (from "LLVM ERROR:" to just "error"),
leading to a failure in this test which is only executed for very recent
versions of gold. Fix this by removing that part of the error message
check, leaving only the interesting part of the message to be checked.
llvm-svn: 364965
I guess the problem is because of endianess of
the bytes tested by "od" tool. I changed the Content
sequence as it does not actually matter.
llvm-svn: 364907
Some of our test cases are using objects which
has sections with a broken sh_offset field.
There was no way to set it from YAML until this patch.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63879
llvm-svn: 364898
Add the IR and the AsmPrinter parts for handling of the DW_OP_entry_values
DWARF operation.
([11/13] Introduce the debug entry values.)
Co-authored-by: Ananth Sowda <asowda@cisco.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikola Prica <nikola.prica@rt-rk.com>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Baev <ibaev@cisco.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60866
llvm-svn: 364542
This allows setting different values for e_shentsize, e_shoff, e_shnum
and e_shstrndx fields and is useful for producing broken inputs for various
test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63771
llvm-svn: 364517
The bitstream reader handles errors poorly. This has two effects:
* Bugs in file handling (especially modules) manifest as an "unexpected end of
file" crash
* Users of clang as a library end up aborting because the code unconditionally
calls `report_fatal_error`
The bitstream reader should be more resilient and return Expected / Error as
soon as an error is encountered, not way late like it does now. This patch
starts doing so and adopting the error handling where I think it makes sense.
There's plenty more to do: this patch propagates errors to be minimally useful,
and follow-ups will propagate them further and improve diagnostics.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42311
<rdar://problem/33159405>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63518
llvm-svn: 364464
The patch teaches yaml2obj/obj2yaml to support parsing/dumping
the sections and symbols with the same name.
A special suffix is added to a name to make it unique.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63596
llvm-svn: 364282
This command prints a description of the referenced function's stack frame.
For each formal parameter and local variable, the tool prints:
- function name
- variable name
- file/line of declaration
- FP-relative variable location (if available)
- size in bytes
- HWASAN tag offset
This information will be used by the HWASAN runtime to identify local
variables in UAR reports.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63468
llvm-svn: 364225
We do not need the elf-groups.x86_64. In one of the tests, it was
used for no solid reason, and for the second test case we can use
YAML input with SHT_GROUP sections.
The patch performs a cleanup of one of the test cases, removes another
one completely (since during the review was found out it actually
duplicates one of the existent tests) and removes the precompiled binary.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63647
llvm-svn: 364167
-d code.
Summary:
Move it into `main` function so the checking is effective for all actions
user may do with llvm-objdump; notably, -r and -s in addition to existing -d.
Match GNU behavior.
Reviewers: jhenderson, grimar, MaskRay, rupprecht
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63631
llvm-svn: 364118
We do not have to spread using the precompiled binaries in the tests,
when we can use YAML. This patch removes the dynrel.elf binary and adds
a few comments to the test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63641
llvm-svn: 364052
There are some test that are splitted into main part + input yaml for no visible reason.
This patch inines the yaml part for the 3 test cases I found.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63644
llvm-svn: 364049
This patch teaches the bottleneck analysis how to identify and print the most
expensive sequence of instructions according to the simulation. Fixes PR37494.
The goal is to help users identify the sequence of instruction which is most
critical for performance.
A dependency graph is internally used by the bottleneck analysis to describe
data dependencies and processor resource interferences between instructions.
There is one node in the graph for every instruction in the input assembly
sequence. The number of nodes in the graph is independent from the number of
iterations simulated by the tool. It means that a single node of the graph
represents all the possible instances of a same instruction contributed by the
simulated iterations.
Edges are dynamically "discovered" by the bottleneck analysis by observing
instruction state transitions and "backend pressure increase" events generated
by the Execute stage. Information from the events is used to identify critical
dependencies, and materialize edges in the graph. A dependency edge is uniquely
identified by a pair of node identifiers plus an instance of struct
DependencyEdge::Dependency (which provides more details about the actual
dependency kind).
The bottleneck analysis internally ranks dependency edges based on their impact
on the runtime (see field DependencyEdge::Dependency::Cost). To this end, each
edge of the graph has an associated cost. By default, the cost of an edge is a
function of its latency (in cycles). In practice, the cost of an edge is also a
function of the number of cycles where the dependency has been seen as
'contributing to backend pressure increases'. The idea is that the higher the
cost of an edge, the higher is the impact of the dependency on performance. To
put it in another way, the cost of an edge is a measure of criticality for
performance.
Note how a same edge may be found in multiple iteration of the simulated loop.
The logic that adds new edges to the graph checks if an equivalent dependency
already exists (duplicate edges are not allowed). If an equivalent dependency
edge is found, field DependencyEdge::Frequency of that edge is incremented by
one, and the new cost is cumulatively added to the existing edge cost.
At the end of simulation, costs are propagated to nodes through the edges of the
graph. The goal is to identify a critical sequence from a node of the root-set
(composed by node of the graph with no predecessors) to a 'sink node' with no
successors. Note that the graph is intentionally kept acyclic to minimize the
complexity of the critical sequence computation algorithm (complexity is
currently linear in the number of nodes in the graph).
The critical path is finally computed as a sequence of dependency edges. For
edges describing processor resource interferences, the view also prints a
so-called "interference probability" value (by dividing field
DependencyEdge::Frequency by the total number of iterations).
Examples of critical sequence computations can be found in tests added/modified
by this patch.
On output streams that support colored output, instructions from the critical
sequence are rendered with a different color.
Strictly speaking the analysis conducted by the bottleneck analysis view is not
a critical path analysis. The cost of an edge doesn't only depend on the
dependency latency. More importantly, the cost of a same edge may be computed
differently by different iterations.
The number of dependencies is discovered dynamically based on the events
generated by the simulator. However, their number is not fixed. This is
especially true for edges that model processor resource interferences; an
interference may not occur in every iteration. For that reason, it makes sense
to also print out a "probability of interference".
By construction, the accuracy of this analysis (as always) is strongly dependent
on the simulation (and therefore the quality of the information available in the
scheduling model).
That being said, the critical sequence effectively identifies a performance
criticality. Instructions from that sequence are expected to have a very big
impact on performance. So, users can take advantage of this information to focus
their attention on specific interactions between instructions.
In my experience, it works quite well in practice, and produces useful
output (in a reasonable amount time).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63543
llvm-svn: 364045
Many LLVM-based tools already support response files (i.e. files
containing a list of options, specified with '@'). This change simply
updates the documentation and help text for some of these tools to
include it. I haven't attempted to fix all tools, just a selection that
I am interested in.
I've taken the opportunity to add some tests for --help behaviour, where
they were missing. We could expand these tests, but I don't think that's
within scope of this patch.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42233 and
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42236.
Reviewed by: grimar, MaskRay, jkorous
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63597
llvm-svn: 364036
--help and -h are automatically supported by the command-line parser,
unless overridden by the tool. The behaviour of the PrintHelpMessage
being used for -h prior to this patch is subtly different to that
provided by --help automatically (it omits certain elements of help text
and options, such as --help-list), so overriding the default is not
desirable, without good reason. This patch removes the explicit
specification of -h and its behaviour, so that the default behaviour is
used.
Reviewed by: hintonda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63565
llvm-svn: 364029
The ARMDisassembler changes allow changing between ARM and Thumb mode
based on the MCSubtargetInfo, rather than the Target, which simplifies
the other changes a bit.
I'm not really happy with adding more target-specific logic to
tools/llvm-objdump/, but there isn't any easy way around it: the logic
in question specifically applies to disassembling an object file, and
that code simply isn't located in lib/Target, at least at the moment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60927
llvm-svn: 363903
The original line was there from when this test was added, but it is
checking for a switch that doesn't exist, so really has no purpose, at
least any more.
llvm-svn: 363833
The check against the output of `od` in the affected tests expect a
specific input offset format. They also expect a specific offset value,
not consistent with the EXAMPLE section for `od` in POSIX.1-2017
Chapter 4, while using the `-j` option. In particular, the example shows
that the input offset begins at 0 following the bytes skipped.
This patch adjusts the matching of the input offset to be more generic.
In order to avoid false matches, it restricts the number of bytes to be
formatted.
llvm-svn: 363829
Summary:
llvm.x86.sse.stmxcsr only writes to memory.
llvm.x86.sse.ldmxcsr only reads from memory, and might generate an FPE.
Reviewers: craig.topper, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62896
llvm-svn: 363773
Summary:
Historically llvm-objdump prints the path to a dylib as well as the
dylib's compatibility version and current version number. This change
extends this information by adding the kind of dylib load: weak,
reexport, etc.
rdar://51383512
Reviewers: pete, lhames
Reviewed By: pete
Subscribers: rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62866
llvm-svn: 363746
1) `-x foo` currently dumps one `foo`. This change makes it dump all `foo`.
2) `-x foo -x foo` currently dumps `foo` twice. This change makes it dump `foo` once.
In addition, if foo has section index 9, `-x foo -x 9` dumps `foo` once.
3) Give a warning instead of an error if `foo` does not exist.
The new behaviors match GNU readelf.
Also, print a new line as a separator between two section dumps.
GNU readelf uses two lines, but one seems good enough.
Reviewed By: grimar, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63475
llvm-svn: 363683
Summary: Implements bug [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42204 | 42204 ]]. llvm-strip now warns when the same input file is used more than once, and errors when stdin is used more than once.
Reviewers: jhenderson, rupprecht, espindola, alexshap
Reviewed By: jhenderson, rupprecht
Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, jakehehrlich, MaskRay, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63122
llvm-svn: 363638
Use -fsave-optimization-record=<format> to specify a different format
than the default, which is YAML.
For now, only YAML is supported.
llvm-svn: 363573