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Commit Graph

36 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
CarlosAlbertoEnciso
8355a030c0 [Debug-Info][CodeView] Fix GUID string generation for MSVC generated objects.
This patch is to address https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50459.
  YAML:455:28: error: GUID strings are 38 characters long

The valid format for a GUID is {XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX}
where X is a hex digit (0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E,F).
The length of the individual components must be: 8, 4, 4, 4, 12.

For some cases, the converted string generated by obj2yaml, does not
comply with those lengths. yaml2obj checks that the GUID string must
be 38 characters including the dashes and braces.

Reviewed By: amccarth

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103089
2021-06-15 06:53:21 +01:00
Reid Kleckner
eccb0fb0b3 Include (Type|Symbol)Record.h less
Most clients only need CVType and CVSymbol, not structs for every type
and symbol. Move CVSymbol and CVType to CVRecord.h to accomplish this.
Update some of the common headers that need CVSymbol and CVType to use
the new location.
2020-09-16 09:59:03 -07:00
Logan Smith
951866abd5 [llvm][NFC] Add missing 'override's in unittests/ 2020-07-17 17:35:59 -07:00
Reid Kleckner
c822eded13 [codeview] Prune SimpleTypeSerializer.h headers, NFC
These are left over from when the class was more complicated. Add a
header comment banner to the .cpp file, which was missing.
2020-01-24 16:07:36 -08:00
Jonas Devlieghere
2c693415b7 [llvm] Migrate llvm::make_unique to std::make_unique
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.

llvm-svn: 369013
2019-08-15 15:54:37 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
5b2d69c207 [codeview] Remove Type member from CVRecord
Summary:
Now CVType and CVSymbol are effectively type-safe wrappers around
ArrayRef<uint8_t>. Make the kind() accessor load it from the
RecordPrefix, which is the same for types and symbols.

Reviewers: zturner, aganea

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60018

llvm-svn: 357658
2019-04-04 00:28:48 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
ae65e281f3 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
0923ab105c [codeview] Use push_macro to avoid conflicts instead of a prefix
Summary:
This prefix was added in r333421, and it changed our dumper output to
say things like "CVRegEAX" instead of just "EAX". That's a functional
change that I'd rather avoid.

I tested GCC, Clang, and MSVC, and all of them support #pragma
push_macro. They don't issue warnings whem the macro is not defined
either.

I don't have a Mac so I can't test the real termios.h header, but I
looked at the termios.h sources online and looked for other conflicts.
I saw only the CR* macros, so those are the ones we work around.

Reviewers: zturner, JDevlieghere

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50851

llvm-svn: 339907
2018-08-16 17:34:31 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea
0f20d5d6a0 [CodeView] Minimal support for S_UNAMESPACE records
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50007

llvm-svn: 338417
2018-07-31 19:15:50 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere
9550ad611d [CodeView] Add prefix to CodeView registers.
Adds CVReg to CodeView register names to prevent a duplicate symbol with
CR3 defined in termios.h, as suggested by Zachary on the mailing list.

http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-May/123372.html

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47478

rdar://39863705

llvm-svn: 333421
2018-05-29 14:35:34 +00:00
Nico Weber
614f75cd49 Inline a few CMake variables into their only uses.
No behavior change. Makes unittests CMakeLists.txt files more self-consistent.

llvm-svn: 332280
2018-05-14 19:23:31 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea
7e03489376 [DebugInfo][COFF] Fix reading variable-length encoded records
While reading Codeview records which contain variable-length encoded integers,
such as LF_BCLASS, LF_ENUMERATE, LF_MEMBER, LF_VBCLASS or LF_IVBCLASS,
the record's size would be improperly calculated in cases where the value was
indeed of a variable length (>= LF_NUMERIC). This caused a bad alignement on
the next record, which would/might crash later on.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45104

llvm-svn: 329659
2018-04-10 01:58:45 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea
3fc35d90c7 Fix line endings (CR/LF -> LF) introduced by rL329613
reviewer: zturner
llvm-svn: 329646
2018-04-10 00:09:15 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea
325264aa91 [Debuginfo][COFF] Minimal serialization support for precompiled types records
This change adds support for the LF_PRECOMP and LF_ENDPRECOMP records required
to read/write Microsoft precompiled types .objs.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precompiled_header#Microsoft_Visual_C_and_C++

This also adds handling for the .debug$P section, which is actually a .debug$T
section in disguise, found only in precompiled .objs.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45283

llvm-svn: 329613
2018-04-09 20:17:56 +00:00
Michael Zolotukhin
f3262a2cdf Remove redundant includes from unittests.
llvm-svn: 320630
2017-12-13 21:31:05 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea
bc61ecbfaa Test commit.
llvm-svn: 320504
2017-12-12 18:00:43 +00:00
Zachary Turner
1e778523f5 [DebugInfo] Fix register variables not showing up in pdb.
Previously, when linking against libcmt from the MSVC runtime,
lld-link /verbose would show "Ignoring unknown symbol record
with kind 0x1006".  It turns out this was because
TypeIndexDiscovery did not handle S_REGISTER records, so these
records were not getting properly remapped.

Patch by: Alexnadre Ganea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40919

llvm-svn: 320108
2017-12-07 22:51:16 +00:00
Zachary Turner
95c87cd4e6 [CodeView] Add support for content hashing CodeView type records.
Currently nothing uses this, but this at least gets the core
algorithm in, and adds some test to demonstrate correctness.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40736

llvm-svn: 319854
2017-12-05 23:08:58 +00:00
Shoaib Meenai
d81bfe1cb8 [CMake] Use PRIVATE in target_link_libraries for executables
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
2017-12-05 21:49:56 +00:00
Zachary Turner
62abbe245b Split TypeTableBuilder into two classes.
llvm-svn: 319456
2017-11-30 18:39:50 +00:00
Zachary Turner
4202759d3b [CodeView] Refactor / Rewrite TypeSerializer and TypeTableBuilder.
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
2017-11-28 18:33:17 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
eb9ed33777 [codeview] Add support for inlinee lists
This adds type index discovery and dumper support for symbol record kind
0x1168, which is a list of inlined function ids. This symbol kind is
undocumented, but S_INLINEES is consistent with the existing
nomenclature.

Fixes PR34222

llvm-svn: 316398
2017-10-23 23:43:40 +00:00
Zachary Turner
ae9d9f3bb3 [PDB] Fix linking of function symbols and local variables.
The compiler outputs PROC32_ID symbols into the object files
for functions, and these symbols have an embedded type index
which, when copied to the PDB, refer to the IPI stream.  However,
the symbols themselves are also converted into regular symbols
(e.g. S_GPROC32_ID -> S_GPROC32), and type indices in the regular
symbol records refer to the TPI stream.  So this patch applies
two fixes to function records.
  1. It converts ID symbols to the proper non-ID record type.
  2. After remapping the type index from the object file's index
     space to the PDB file/IPI stream's index space, it then
     remaps that index to the TPI stream's index space by.

Besides functions, during the remapping process we were also
discarding symbol record types which we did not recognize.
In particular, we were discarding S_BPREL32 records, which is
what MSVC uses to describe local variables on the stack.  So
this patch fixes that as well by copying them to the PDB.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36426

llvm-svn: 310394
2017-08-08 18:34:44 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
3ab9e840a9 [codeview] Remove TypeServerHandler and PDBTypeServerHandler
Summary:
Instead of wiring these through the CVTypeVisitor interface, clients
should inspect the CVTypeArray before visiting it and potentially load
up the type server's TPI stream if they need it.

No tests relied on this functionality because LLD was the only client.

Reviewers: ruiu

Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, zturner, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35394

llvm-svn: 308212
2017-07-17 20:28:06 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
d394a5b7a6 [PDB] Add symbols to the PDB
Summary:
The main complexity in adding symbol records is that we need to
"relocate" all the type indices. Type indices do not have anything like
relocations, an opaque data structure describing where to find existing
type indices for fixups. The linker just has to "know" where the type
references are in the symbol records. I added an overload of
`discoverTypeIndices` that works on symbol records, and it seems to be
able to link the standard library.

Reviewers: zturner, ruiu

Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34432

llvm-svn: 305933
2017-06-21 17:25:56 +00:00
Zachary Turner
49affd87fd Try to fix uninitialized read in unit test.
llvm-svn: 305753
2017-06-19 21:59:09 +00:00
Zachary Turner
e0445e24ac [CodeView] Fix random access of type names.
Suppose we had a type index offsets array with a boundary at type index
N. Then you request the name of the type with index N+1, and that name
requires the name of index N-1 (think a parameter list, for example). We
didn't handle this, and we would print something like (<unknown UDT>,
<unknown UDT>).

The fix for this is not entirely trivial, and speaks to a larger
problem. I think we need to kill TypeDatabase, or at the very least kill
TypeDatabaseVisitor. We need a thing that doesn't do any caching
whatsoever, just given a type index it can compute the type name "the
slow way". The reason for the bug is that we don't have anything like
that. Everything goes through the type database, and if we've visited a
record, then we're "done". It doesn't know how to do the expensive thing
of re-visiting dependent records if they've not yet been visited.

What I've done here is more or less copied the code (albeit greatly
simplified) from TypeDatabaseVisitor, but wrapped it in an interface
that just returns a std::string. The logic of caching the name is now in
LazyRandomTypeCollection. Eventually I'd like to move the record
database here as well and the visited record bitfield here as well, at
which point we can actually just delete TypeDatabase. I don't see any
reason for it if a "sequential" collection is just a special case of a
random access collection with an empty partial offsets array.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34297

llvm-svn: 305612
2017-06-16 23:42:44 +00:00
Zachary Turner
04288c68df Don't include TestingSupport in LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS.
Instead use target_link_libraries directly.  Thanks to
Juergen Ributzka for the suggestion, which fixes an issue
when llvm is configured with no targets.

llvm-svn: 305421
2017-06-14 22:33:43 +00:00
Zachary Turner
7470585f23 [gtest] Create a shared include directory for gtest utilities.
Many times unit tests for different libraries would like to use
the same helper functions for checking common types of errors.

This patch adds a common library with helpers for testing things
in Support, and introduces helpers in here for integrating the
llvm::Error and llvm::Expected<T> classes with gtest and gmock.

Normally, we would just be able to write:

   EXPECT_THAT(someFunction(), succeeded());

but due to some quirks in llvm::Error's move semantics, gmock
doesn't make this easy, so two macros EXPECT_THAT_ERROR() and
EXPECT_THAT_EXPECTED() are introduced to gloss over the difficulties.
Consider this an exception, and possibly only temporary as we
look for ways to improve this.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33059

llvm-svn: 305395
2017-06-14 16:41:50 +00:00
Zachary Turner
57b40ea3a5 [CV Type Merging] Find nested type indices faster.
Merging two type streams is one of the most time consuming
parts of generating a PDB, and as such it needs to be as
fast as possible.  The visitor abstractions used for interoperating
nicely with many different types of inputs and outputs have
been used widely and help greatly for testability and implementing
tools, but the abstractions build up and get in the way of
performance.

This patch removes all of the visitation stuff from the type
stream merger, essentially re-inventing the leaf / member switch
and loop, but at a very low level.  This allows us many other
optimizations, such as not actually deserializing *any* records
(even member records which don't describe their own length), as
the operation of "figure out how long this record is" is somewhat
faster than "figure out how long this record *and* get all its
fields out".  Furthermore, whereas before we had to deserialize,
re-write type indices, then re-serialize, now we don't have to
do any of those 3 steps.  We just find out where the type indices
are and pull them directly out of the byte stream and re-write
them.

This is worth a 50-60% performance increase.  On top of all other
optimizations that have been applied this week, I now get the
following numbers when linking lld.exe and lld.pdb

MSVC: 25.67s
Before This Patch: 18.59s
After This Patch: 8.92s

So this is a huge performance win.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33564

llvm-svn: 303935
2017-05-25 23:36:16 +00:00
Zachary Turner
c669552325 Resubmit "[CodeView] Provide a common interface for type collections."
This was originally reverted because it was a breaking a bunch
of bots and the breakage was not surfacing on Windows.  After much
head-scratching this was ultimately traced back to a bug in the
lit test runner related to its pipe handling.  Now that the bug
in lit is fixed, Windows correctly reports these test failures,
and as such I have finally (hopefully) fixed all of them in this
patch.

llvm-svn: 303446
2017-05-19 19:26:58 +00:00
Zachary Turner
4a5590fa6b Revert "[CodeView] Provide a common interface for type collections."
This is a squash of ~5 reverts of, well, pretty much everything
I did today.  Something is seriously broken with lit on Windows
right now, and as a result assertions that fire in tests are
triggering failures.  I've been breaking non-Windows bots all
day which has seriously confused me because all my tests have
been passing, and after running lit with -a to view the output
even on successful runs, I find out that the tool is crashing
and yet lit is still reporting it as a success!

At this point I don't even know where to start, so rather than
leave the tree broken for who knows how long, I will get this
back to green, and then once lit is fixed on Windows, hopefully
hopefully fix the remaining set of problems for real.

llvm-svn: 303409
2017-05-19 05:57:45 +00:00
Zachary Turner
05edea832d [CodeView] Provide a common interface for type collections.
Right now we have multiple notions of things that represent collections of
types. Most commonly used are TypeDatabase, which is supposed to keep
mappings from TypeIndex to type name when reading a type stream, which
happens when reading PDBs. And also TypeTableBuilder, which is used to
build up a collection of types dynamically which we will later serialize
(i.e. when writing PDBs).

But often you just want to do some operation on a collection of types, and
you may want to do the same operation on any kind of collection. For
example, you might want to merge two TypeTableBuilders or you might want
to merge two type streams that you loaded from various files.

This dichotomy between reading and writing is responsible for a lot of the
existing code duplication and overlapping responsibilities in the existing
CodeView library classes. For example, after building up a
TypeTableBuilder with a bunch of type records, if we want to dump it we
have to re-invent a bunch of extra glue because our dumper takes a
TypeDatabase or a CVTypeArray, which are both incompatible with
TypeTableBuilder.

This patch introduces an abstract base class called TypeCollection which
is shared between the various type collection like things. Wherever we
previously stored a TypeDatabase& in some common class, we now store a
TypeCollection&.

The advantage of this is that all the details of how the collection are
implemented, such as lazy deserialization of partial type streams, is
completely transparent and you can just treat any collection of types the
same regardless of where it came from.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33293

llvm-svn: 303388
2017-05-18 23:03:06 +00:00
Zachary Turner
5f8e1427eb [CodeView] Simplify the use of visiting type records & streams.
There is often a lot of boilerplate code required to visit a type
record or type stream.  The #1 use case is that you have a sequence
of bytes that represent one or more records, and you want to
deserialize each one, switch on it, and call a callback with the
deserialized record that the user can examine.  Currently this
requires at least 6 lines of code:

  codeview::TypeVisitorCallbackPipeline Pipeline;
  Pipeline.addCallbackToPipeline(Deserializer);
  Pipeline.addCallbackToPipeline(MyCallbacks);

  codeview::CVTypeVisitor Visitor(Pipeline);
  consumeError(Visitor.visitTypeRecord(Record));

With this patch, it becomes one line of code:

  consumeError(codeview::visitTypeRecord(Record, MyCallbacks));

This is done by having the deserialization happen internally inside
of the visitTypeRecord function.  Since this is occasionally not
desirable, the function provides a 3rd parameter that can be used
to change this behavior.

Hopefully this can significantly reduce the barrier to entry
to using the visitation infrastructure.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33245

llvm-svn: 303271
2017-05-17 16:39:06 +00:00
Justin Bogner
f945705243 [CodeView] Silence some -Wsign-compare warnings
llvm-svn: 302971
2017-05-13 00:11:39 +00:00
Zachary Turner
aaaf4b3ba3 [CodeView] Add a random access type visitor.
This adds a visitor that is capable of accessing type
records randomly and caching intermediate results that it
learns about during partial linear scans.  This yields
amortized O(1) access to a type stream even though type
streams cannot normally be indexed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33009

llvm-svn: 302936
2017-05-12 19:18:12 +00:00