When printing line information and file checksums, we were printing
the file offset field from the struct header. This teaches
llvm-pdbdump how to turn those numbers into the filename. In the
case of file checksums, this is done by looking in the global
string table. In the case of line contributions, this is done
by indexing into the file names buffer of the DBI stream. Why
they use a different technique I don't know.
llvm-svn: 271630
To facilitate this, a couple of changes had to be made:
1. `ModuleSubstream` got moved from `DebugInfo/PDB` to
`DebugInfo/CodeView`, and various codeview related types are defined
there. It turns out `DebugInfo/CodeView/Line.h` already defines many of
these structures, but this is really old code that is not endian aware,
doesn't interact well with `StreamInterface` and not very helpful for
getting stuff out of a PDB. Eventually we should migrate the old readobj
`COFFDumper` code to these new structures, or at least merge their
functionality somehow.
2. A `ModuleSubstream` visitor is introduced. Depending on where your
module substream array comes from, different subsets of record types can
be expected. We are already hand parsing these substream arrays in many
places especially in `COFFDumper.cpp`. In the future we can migrate these
paths to the visitor as well, which should reduce a lot of code in
`COFFDumper.cpp`.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20936
Reviewed By: ruiu, majnemer
llvm-svn: 271621
This first pass only splits apart the records and dumps the line
info kinds and binary data. Subsequent patches will parse out
the binary data into more useful information and dump it in
detail.
llvm-svn: 271576
Unlike other sections that can grow to any size, the COFF section header
stream has maximum length because each record is fixed size and the COFF
file format limits the maximum number of sections. So I decided to not
create a specific stream class for it. Instead, I added a member function
to DbiStream class which returns a vector of COFF headers.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20717
llvm-svn: 271557
name_ids() did not return all IDs but only the first NameCount items.
The number of non-zero entries in IDs vector is NameCount, but it
does not mean that all non-zero entries are at the beginning of IDs
vector.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20611
llvm-svn: 270656
This adds support for parsing and dumping the following
symbol types:
S_LPROCREF
S_ENVBLOCK
S_COMPILE2
S_REGISTER
S_COFFGROUP
S_SECTION
S_THUNK32
S_TRAMPOLINE
As of this patch, the test PDB files no longer have any unknown
symbol types.
llvm-svn: 270628
When dumping huge PDB files, too many of the options were grouped
together so you would get neverending spew of output. This patch
introduces more granular display options so you can only dump the
fields you actually care about.
llvm-svn: 270607
This makes use of the newly introduced `CVSymbolVisitor` to dump details
of each type of symbol record in the symbol streams. Future patches will
bring this visitor based dumping to the publics stream, as well as
creating a `SymbolDumpDelegate` to print more information about
relocations etc.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20545
Reviewed By: ruiu
llvm-svn: 270585
DBI stream contains a stream number of the symbol record stream.
Symbol record streams is an array of length-type-value members.
Each member represents one symbol.
Publics stream contains offsets to the symbol record stream.
This patch is to print out all symbols that are referenced by
the publics stream.
Note that even with this patch, llvm-pdbdump cannot dump all the
information in a publics stream since it contains more information
than symbol names. I'll improve it in followup patches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20480
llvm-svn: 270262
I don't yet fully understand the meaning of these data strcutures,
but at least it seems that their sizes and types are correct.
With this change, we can read publics streams till end.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20343
llvm-svn: 269861
Publics stream seems to contain information as to public symbols.
It actually contains a serialized hash table along with fixed-sized
headers. This patch is not complete. It scans only till the end of
the stream and dump the header information. I'll write code to
de-serialize the hash table later.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20256
llvm-svn: 269484
Summary: This way we can get rid of one of the fields in the .def file.
Reviewers: llvm-commits
Subscribers: zturner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20251
llvm-svn: 269461
This reuses the CVTypeDumper from libcodeview to dump full
information about type records within a PDB file.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20022
Reviewed By: rnk
llvm-svn: 268808
When printing raw PDB file fields, streams, and records, use the
ScopedPrinter class so we have consistency with llvm-readobj's output
format.
For the most part this is pretty mechanical, but I had to fix up the test
file to conform to the new YAMLesque output format. i added a few
additional helper functions to the ScopedPrinter such as one to print a
dotted version, etc.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19897
Reviewed By: rnk
llvm-svn: 268506
This parses the TPI stream (stream 2) from the PDB file. This stream
contains some header information followed by a series of codeview records.
There is some additional complexity here in that alongside this stream of
codeview records is a serialized hash table in order to efficiently query
the types. We parse the necessary bookkeeping information to allow us to
reconstruct the hash table, but we do not actually construct it yet as
there are still a few things that need to be understood first.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19840
Reviewed By: ruiu, rnk
llvm-svn: 268343
PDB has a lot of similar data structures. We already have code
for parsing a Name Map, but PDB seems to have a different but
very similar structure that is a hash table. This is the
beginning of code needed in order to parse the name hash table,
but it is not yet complete. It parses the basic metadata of
the hash table, the bucket array, and the names buffer, but
doesn't use any of these fields yet as the data structure
requires a non-trivial amount of work to understand.
llvm-svn: 268268
We now read out the rest of the substreams from the DBI streams. One of
these substreams, the FileInfo substream, contains information about which
source files contribute to each module (aka compiland). This patch
additionally parses out the file information from that substream, and
dumps it in llvm-pdbdump.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19634
Reviewed by: ruiu
llvm-svn: 267928
This gets more data out of the DBI strema of the PDB. In
particular it extracts the metadata for the list of modules
(compilands) that this PDB contains info about, and adds support
for dumping these fields to llvm-pdbdump.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19570
Reviewed By: ruiu
llvm-svn: 267818
The DBI stream contains a lot of bookkeeping information for other
streams. In particular it contains information about section contributions
and linked modules. This patch is a first attempt at parsing some of the
information out of the DBI stream. It currently only parses and dumps the
headers of the DBI stream, so none of the module data or section
contribution data is pulled out.
This is just a proof of concept that we understand the basic properties of
the DBI stream's metadata, and followup patches will try to extract more
detailed information out.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19500
Reviewed By: majnemer, ruiu
llvm-svn: 267585
r267049 broke multiple buildbots (e.g. clang-cmake-mips, and clang-x86_64-linux-selfhost-modules) which the follow-ups have not yet resolved and this is preventing subsequent committers from being notified about additional failures on the affected buildbots.
llvm-svn: 267148
We were incorrectly reporting all non-64 bit integers as int64s.
This is most evident when trying to print the "short" type, but
in theory could happen with chars too (although usually chars use
a different builtin type).
Additionally, we were using the wrong check when deciding whether
to print an enum definition as a global enum. We were checking
whether or not the enum was "nested", and if so saving it until
we print the class definition that it was nested in. But this is
not correct in rare situations where the enum is nested, but the
class that it's nested in does not have type information in the PDB.
So instead we check if there is a class definition for the parent
in the PDB. If so we save it for later, otherwise we print it.
llvm-svn: 265993