Now that the libObect support for wasm is better we can
have readobj and nm produce more useful output too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31514
llvm-svn: 300365
Start using it in LLD to avoid needing to read bitcode again just to get the
target triple, and in llvm-lto2 to avoid printing symbol table information
that is inappropriate for the target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32038
llvm-svn: 300300
Summary:
The linker needs to be able to determine whether a symbol is text or data to
handle the case of a common being overridden by a strong definition in an
archive. If the archive contains a text member of the same name as the common,
that function is discarded. However, if the archive contains a data member of
the same name, that strong definition overrides the common. This is a behavior
of ld.bfd, which the Qualcomm linker also supports in LTO.
Here's a test case to illustrate:
####
cat > 1.c << \!
int blah;
!
cat > 2.c << \!
int blah() {
return 0;
}
!
cat > 3.c << \!
int blah = 20;
!
clang -c 1.c
clang -c 2.c
clang -c 3.c
ar cr lib.a 2.o 3.o
ld 1.o lib.a -t
####
The correct output is:
1.o
(lib.a)3.o
Thanks to Shankar Easwaran and Hemant Kulkarni for the test case!
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, rafael, pcc, davide
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: davide, llvm-commits, inglorion
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31901
llvm-svn: 300205
Introduce symbol table data structures that can be potentially written to
disk, have the LTO library build those data structures using temporarily
constructed modules and redirect the LTO library implementation to go through
those data structures. This allows us to remove the LLVMContext and Modules
owned by InputFile.
With this change I measured a peak memory consumption decrease from 5.4GB to
2.8GB in a no-op incremental ThinLTO link of Chromium on Linux. The impact on
memory consumption is larger in COFF linkers where we are currently forced
to materialize all metadata in order to read linker options. Peak memory
consumption linking a large piece of Chromium for Windows with full LTO and
debug info decreases from >64GB (OOM) to 15GB.
Part of PR27551.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31364
llvm-svn: 299168
Mostly this change adds support converting to and from
YAML which will allow us to write more test cases for
the WebAssembly MC and lld ports.
Better support for objdump, readelf, and nm will be in
followup CLs.
I had to update the two wasm test binaries because they
used the old style 'name' section which is no longer
supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31099
Patch by Sam Clegg
llvm-svn: 299101
rebase entry errors and test cases for each of the error checks.
Also verified with Nick Kledzik that a BIND_OPCODE_SET_ADDEND_SLEB
opcode is legal in a lazy bind table, so code that had that as an error
check was removed.
With MachORebaseEntry and MachOBindEntry classes now returning
an llvm::Error in all cases for malformed input the variables Malformed
and logic to set use them is no longer needed and has been removed
from those classes.
Also in a few places, removed the redundant Done assignment to true
when also calling moveToEnd() as it does that assignment.
This only leaves the dyld compact export entries left to have
error handling yet to be added for the dyld compact info.
llvm-svn: 298883
Summary:
The cumulative size of the bitcode files for a very large application
can be huge, particularly with -g. In a distributed build environment,
all of these files must be sent to the remote build node that performs
the thin link step, and this can exceed size limits.
The thin link actually only needs the summary along with a bitcode
symbol table. Until we have a proper bitcode symbol table, simply
stripping the debug metadata results in significant size reduction.
Add support for an option to additionally emit minimized bitcode
modules, just for use in the thin link step, which for now just strips
all debug metadata. I plan to add a cc1 option so this can be invoked
easily during the compile step.
However, care must be taken to ensure that these minimized thin link
bitcode files produce the same index as with the original bitcode files,
as these original bitcode files will be used in the backends.
Specifically:
1) The module hash used for caching is typically produced by hashing the
written bitcode, and we want to include the hash that would correspond
to the original bitcode file. This is because we want to ensure that
changes in the stripped portions affect caching. Added plumbing to emit
the same module hash in the minimized thin link bitcode file.
2) The module paths in the index are constructed from the module ID of
each thin linked bitcode, and typically is automatically generated from
the input file path. This is the path used for finding the modules to
import from, and obviously we need this to point to the original bitcode
files. Added gold-plugin support to take a suffix replacement during the
thin link that is used to override the identifier on the MemoryBufferRef
constructed from the loaded thin link bitcode file. The assumption is
that the build system can specify that the minimized bitcode file has a
name that is similar but uses a different suffix (e.g. out.thinlink.bc
instead of out.o).
Added various tests to ensure that we get identical index files out of
the thin link step.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, pcc
Subscribers: Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31027
llvm-svn: 298638
and test cases for each of the error checks.
To do this more plumbing was needed so that the segment indexes and
segment offsets can be checked. Basically what was done was the SegInfo
from llvm-objdump’s MachODump.cpp was moved into libObject for Mach-O
objects as BindRebaseSegInfo and it is only created when an iterator for
bind or rebase entries are created.
This commit really only adds the error checking and test cases for the
bind table entires and the checking for the lazy bind and weak bind entries
are still to be fully done as well as the rebase entires. Though some of
the plumbing for those are added with this commit. Those other error
checks and test cases will be added in follow on commits.
Note, the two llvm_unreachable() calls should now actually be unreachable
with the error checks in place and would take a logic bug in the error
checking code to be reached if the segment indexes and segment
offsets are used from a checked bind entry. Comments have been added
to the methods that require the arguments to have been checked
prior to calling.
llvm-svn: 298292
Summary:
In a .symver assembler directive like:
.symver name, name2@@nodename
"name2@@nodename" should get the same symbol binding as "name".
While the ELF object writer is updating the symbol binding for .symver
aliases before emitting the object file, not doing so when the module
inline assembly is handled by the RecordStreamer is causing the wrong
behavior in *LTO mode.
E.g. when "name" is global, "name2@@nodename" must also be marked as
global. Otherwise, the symbol is skipped when iterating over the LTO
InputFile symbols (InputFile::Symbol::shouldSkip). So, for example,
when performing any *LTO via the gold-plugin, the versioned symbol
definition is not recorded by the plugin and passed back to the
linker. If the object was in an archive, and there were no other symbols
needed from that object, the object would not be included in the final
link and references to the versioned symbol are undefined.
The llvm-lto2 tests added will give an error about an unused symbol
resolution without the fix.
Reviewers: rafael, pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30485
llvm-svn: 297332
other tables. Providing a helpful error message to what the error is and
where the error occurred based on which opcode it was associated with.
There have been handful of bug fixes dealing with bad bind info in
object files, r294021 and r249845, which only put a band aid on the
problem after a bad bind table was created after unpacking from
its compact info. In these cases a bind table should have never been
created and an error should have simply been generated.
This change puts in place the plumbing to allow checking and returning
of an error when the compact info is unpacked. This follows the model
of iterators that can fail that Lang Hanes designed when fixing the problem
for bad archives r275316 (or r275361).
This change uses one of the existing test cases that now causes an
error instead of printing <<bad library ordinal>> after a bad bind table
is created. The error uses the offset into the opcode table as shown with
the macOS dyldinfo(1) tool to indicate where the error is and which
opcode and which parameter is in error.
For example the exiting test case has this lazy binding opcode table:
% dyldinfo -opcodes test/tools/llvm-objdump/Inputs/bad-ordinal.macho-x86_64
…
lazy binding opcodes:
0x0000 BIND_OPCODE_SET_SEGMENT_AND_OFFSET_ULEB(0x02, 0x00000010)
0x0002 BIND_OPCODE_SET_DYLIB_ORDINAL_IMM(2)
In the test case the binary only has one library so setting the library
ordinal to the value of 2 in the BIND_OPCODE_SET_DYLIB_ORDINAL_IMM
opcode at 0x0002 above is an error. This now produces this error message:
% llvm-objdump -lazy-bind bad-ordinal.macho-x86_64
…
llvm-objdump: 'bad-ordinal.macho-x86_64': truncated or malformed object (for BIND_OPCODE_SET_DYLIB_ORDINAL_ULEB bad library ordinal: 2 (max 1) for opcode at: 0x2)
This change provides the plumbing for the error handling and one example
of an error message. Other error checks and test cases will be added in follow
on commits.
llvm-svn: 296527
For whatever reason ld64 requires that member headers (not the member
themselves) should be aligned. The only way to do that is to edit the
previous member so that it ends at an aligned boundary.
Since modifying data put in an archive is an undesirable property,
llvm-ar should only do it when it is absolutely necessary.
llvm-svn: 295765
Changed format specifiers to use format macro constant for pointer type.
Moved width part of format specifier in the correct place for formatting members a and b.
Added a unit test to confirm the output.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28957
llvm-svn: 295173
The Requires class overrides the target requirements of an instruction,
rather than adding to them, so all ARM instructions need to include the
IsARM predicate when they have overwitten requirements.
This caused the swp and swpb instructions to be allowed in thumb mode
assembly, and the ARM encoding of CDP to be selected in codegen (which
is different for conditional instructions).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29283
llvm-svn: 293634
Create a WasmDumper subclass of ObjDumper to support Webassembly binary
files.
Patch by Sam Clegg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27355
llvm-svn: 293569
Summary:
Add a new load command LC_BUILD_VERSION. It is a generic version of
LC_*_VERSION_MIN load_command used on Apple platforms. Instead of having
a seperate load command for each platform, LC_BUILD_VERSION is recording
platform info as an enum. It also records SDK version, min_os, and tools
that used to build the binary.
rdar://problem/29781291
Reviewers: enderby
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29044
llvm-svn: 292824
It describes a region of arbitrary data included in a Mach-O file.
Its initial use is to record extra data in MH_CORE files.
rdar://30001545
rdar://30001731
llvm-svn: 292500
An ELFObjectFile can now create SubtargetFeatures from the available
ARM build attributes, in a similar manner to MIPS. I've moved the
MIPS code into its own function and the ARM handler also has a
separate function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28291
llvm-svn: 292403
Enable an ELFObjectFile to read the its arm build attributes to
produce a target triple with a specific ARM architecture.
llvm-objdump now uses this functionality to automatically produce
a more accurate target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28769
llvm-svn: 292366
Summary:
Revert [ARM] Fix ubig32_t read in ARMAttributeParser
Now using support functions to read data instead of trying to
perform casts.
===========================================================
Revert [ARM] Enable objdump to construct triple for ARM
Now that The ARMAttributeParser has been moved into the library,
it has been modified so that it can parse the attributes without
printing them and stores them in a map. ELFObjectFile now queries
the attributes to fill out the architecture details of a provided
triple for 'arm' and 'thumb' targets. llvm-objdump uses this new
functionality.
Subscribers: llvm-commits, samparker, aemerson, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28683
llvm-svn: 291911
Now that The ARMAttributeParser has been moved into the library,
it has been modified so that it can parse the attributes without
printing them and stores them in a map. ELFObjectFile now queries
the attributes to fill out the architecture details of a provided
triple for 'arm' and 'thumb' targets. llvm-objdump uses this new
functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28281
llvm-svn: 291898
Decompressor intention is to reduce duplication of code.
Currently LLD has own implementation of decompressor
for compressed debug sections.
This class helps to avoid it and share the code.
LLD patch for reusing it is D28106
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28105
llvm-svn: 291675
The Mach-O command line flag like "-arch armv7m" does not match the
arch name part of its llvm Triple which is "thumbv7m-apple-darwin”.
I think the best way to fix this is to have
llvm::object::MachOObjectFile::getArchTriple() optionally return the
name of the Mach-O arch flag that would be used with -arch that
matches the CPUType and CPUSubType. Then change
llvm::object::MachOUniversalBinary::ObjectForArch::getArchTypeName()
to use that and change it to getArchFlagName() as the type name is
really part of the Triple and the -arch flag name is a Mach-O thing
for a specific Triple with a specific Mcpu value.
rdar://29663637
llvm-svn: 290001
Summary: The relocation is missing mask so an address that has non-zero bits in 47:43 may overwrite the register number. (Frequently shows up as target register changed to `xzr`....)
Reviewers: t.p.northover, lhames
Subscribers: davide, aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27609
llvm-svn: 289880
This allows us to remove a few uses of IRObjectFile::getSymbolGV() in
llvm-nm.
While here change host-dependent logic in llvm-nm to target-dependent
logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27075
llvm-svn: 288320
This class represents a symbol table built from in-memory IR. It provides
access to GlobalValues and should only be used if such access is required
(e.g. in the LTO implementation). We will eventually change IRObjectFile
to read from a bitcode symbol table rather than using ModuleSymbolTable,
so it would not be able to expose the module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27073
llvm-svn: 288319
Summary:
When using thin archives, and processing the same archive multiple times, we were mangling existing entries. The root cause is that we were calling computeRelativePath() more than once. Here, we only call it when adding new members to an archive.
Note that D27218 changes the way thin archives are printed, and will break the new unit test included here. Depending on which one lands first, the other will need to be slightly modified.
Reviewers: rafael, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27217
llvm-svn: 288280
This is the first part of an effort to add wasm binary
support across all llvm tools.
Patch by Sam Clegg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26172
llvm-svn: 288251
Change the IRObjectFile symbol iterator to be a pointer into a vector of
PointerUnions representing either IR symbols or asm symbols.
This change is in preparation for a future change for supporting multiple
modules in an IRObjectFile. Although it causes an increase in memory
consumption, we can deal with that issue separately by introducing a bitcode
symbol table.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26928
llvm-svn: 287845
- teach RelocVisitor to recognize bpf relocations
- fix AsmInfo->PointerSize to make sure dwarf is emitted correctly
- add a test for the above
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 287521
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
Sometimes, llvm-symbolizer gives wrong results due to incorrect sizes of some symbols. The reason for that was an incorrectly sorted array in computeSymbolSizes. The comparison function used subtraction of unsigned types, which is incorrect. Let's change this to return explicit -1 or 1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26537
llvm-svn: 287028
The philosophy of the error checking in libObject for Mach-O files
is that the constructor will check the load commands so for their
tables the offsets and sizes are properly contained in the file.
But there is no checking of the entries of any of the tables.
For the contents of the tables themselves the methods accessing
the contents of the entries return errors as needed. In some
cases this however makes it difficult or cumbersome to produce
a good error message which would include the tool name, file name,
archive member, and name of the architecture of a slice of a universal file
the error occurred in.
So idea is that there will be a method to check a table which can
be called up front before using it allowing a good error message
to be produced before a table is used. And if only verification of
the Mach-O file and its tables are wanted a new possible method
checkAllTables() could be added to call all of the methods to
check all the tables at some time when such methods exist.
The checkSymbolTable() is the first of such methods to check
one of the Mach-O file tables. This method initially will used in
llvm-objdump’s DisassembleMachO() routine before it gets the
section and symbol information. As if there are problems with
the symbol table currently the error is first encountered by the
bool operator() in the SymbolSorter() struct which passed to
std::sort(). In this case there is no context as to the file name
the symbol which results a poor error message:
LLVM ERROR: truncated or malformed object (bad string index: 22 for symbol at index 1)
with the added call to the checkSymbolTable() method the
error message includes the tool name and file name:
llvm-objdump: 'macho-invalid-symbol-strx': truncated or malformed object (bad string table index: 22 past the end of string table, for symbol at index 1)
llvm-svn: 286887