This has two advantages:
1) We slowly move away from ErrorOr to the new handling interface,
in the hope of having an uniform error handling in LLVM, eventually.
2) We're starting to have *meaningful* error messages for invalid
object ELF files, rather than a generic "parse error". At some point
we should include also the offset to improve the quality of the
diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 287081
We wish to re-use this from llvm-pdbdump, and it provides a nice
way to print structured data in scoped format that could prove
useful for many other dumping tools as well. Moving to support
and changing name to ScopedPrinter to better reflect its purpose.
llvm-svn: 268342
Produce another specific error message for a malformed Mach-O file when a symbol’s
string index is past the end of the string table. The existing test case in test/Object/macho-invalid.test
for macho-invalid-symbol-name-past-eof now reports the error with the message indicating
that a symbol at a specific index has a bad sting index and that bad string index value.
Again converting interfaces to Expected<> from ErrorOr<> does involve
touching a number of places. Where the existing code reported the error with a
string message or an error code it was converted to do the same. There is some
code for this that could be factored into a routine but I would like to leave that for
the code owners post-commit to do as they want for handling an llvm::Error. An
example of how this could be done is shown in the diff in
lib/ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/RuntimeDyldImpl.h which had a Check() routine
already for std::error_code so I added one like it for llvm::Error .
Also there some were bugs in the existing code that did not deal with the
old ErrorOr<> return values. So now with Expected<> since they must be
checked and the error handled, I added a TODO and a comment:
“// TODO: Actually report errors helpfully” and a call something like
consumeError(NameOrErr.takeError()) so the buggy code will not crash
since needed to deal with the Error.
Note there fixes needed to lld that goes along with this that I will commit right after this.
So expect lld not to built after this commit and before the next one.
llvm-svn: 266919
With this we finally have an ELFFile that is O(1) to construct. This is helpful
for programs like lld which have to do their own section walk.
llvm-svn: 244510
This also improves the logic of what is an error:
* getSection(uint_32): only return an error if the index is out of bounds. The
index 0 corresponds to a perfectly valid entry.
* getSection(Elf_Sym): Returns null for symbols that normally don't have
sections and error for out of bound indexes.
In many places this just moves the report_fatal_error up the stack, but those
can then be fixed in smaller patches.
llvm-svn: 241156
It was a fairly broken concept for an ELF only class.
An ELF file can have two symbol tables, but they have exactly the same
format. There is no concept of a dynamic or a static symbol. Storing this
on the iterator also makes us do more work per symbol than necessary. To fetch
a name we would:
* Find if we had a static or a dynamic symbol.
* Look at the corresponding symbol table and find the string table section.
* Look at the string table section to fetch its contents.
* Compute the name as a substring of the string table.
All but the last step can be done per symbol table instead of per symbol. This
is a step in that direction.
llvm-svn: 240939
Add header guards to files that were missing guards. Remove #endif comments
as they don't seem common in LLVM (we can easily add them back if we decide
they're useful)
Changes made by clang-tidy with minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 215558
In some cases it is possible to have a personality 0 unwinding opcodes in the
extab (such as when .handlerdata is used in the assembly). Simply decode the 3
opcodes for that case.
llvm-svn: 201030
Add support to llvm-readobj to decode the actual opcodes. The ARM EHABI opcodes
are a variable length instruction set that describe the operations required for
properly unwinding stack frames.
The primary motivation for this change is to ease the creation of tests for the
ARM EHABI object emission as well as the unwinding directive handling in the ARM
IAS.
Thanks to Logan Chien for an extra test case!
llvm-svn: 199708
Rename bytecode to opcodes to make it more clear. Change an impossible case to
llvm_unreachable instead. Avoid allocation of a buffer by modifying the
PrintOpcodes iteration.
llvm-svn: 198848
This adds some preliminary support for decoding ARM EHABI unwinding information.
The major functionality that remains from complete support is bytecode
translation.
Each Unwind Index Table is printed out as a separate entity along with its
section index, name, offset, and entries.
Each entry lists the function address, and if possible, the name, of the
function to which it corresponds. The encoding model, personality routine or
index, and byte code is also listed.
llvm-svn: 198734