A short list of some of the improvements:
1) Now supports -all command line argument, which implies many
other command line arguments to simplify usage.
2) Now supports -no-compiler-generated command line argument to
exclude compiler generated types.
3) Prints base class list.
4) -class-definitions implies -types.
5) Proper display of bitfields.
6) Can now distinguish between struct/class/interface/union.
And a few other minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 230933
r228631 stopped using `DW_OP_piece` inside `DIExpression`s in the IR,
but it apparently missed updating these testcases. Caught by verifier
checks for `MDExpression` while working on moving the new hierarchy into
place.
llvm-svn: 230882
Essentially the same as the GEP change in r230786.
A similar migration script can be used to update test cases, though a few more
test case improvements/changes were required this time around: (r229269-r229278)
import fileinput
import sys
import re
pat = re.compile(r"((?:=|:|^)\s*load (?:atomic )?(?:volatile )?(.*?))(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*($| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$)")
for line in sys.stdin:
sys.stdout.write(re.sub(pat, r"\1, \2\3*\4", line))
Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7649
llvm-svn: 230794
One of several parallel first steps to remove the target type of pointers,
replacing them with a single opaque pointer type.
This adds an explicit type parameter to the gep instruction so that when the
first parameter becomes an opaque pointer type, the type to gep through is
still available to the instructions.
* This doesn't modify gep operators, only instructions (operators will be
handled separately)
* Textual IR changes only. Bitcode (including upgrade) and changing the
in-memory representation will be in separate changes.
* geps of vectors are transformed as:
getelementptr <4 x float*> %x, ...
->getelementptr float, <4 x float*> %x, ...
Then, once the opaque pointer type is introduced, this will ultimately look
like:
getelementptr float, <4 x ptr> %x
with the unambiguous interpretation that it is a vector of pointers to float.
* address spaces remain on the pointer, not the type:
getelementptr float addrspace(1)* %x
->getelementptr float, float addrspace(1)* %x
Then, eventually:
getelementptr float, ptr addrspace(1) %x
Importantly, the massive amount of test case churn has been automated by
same crappy python code. I had to manually update a few test cases that
wouldn't fit the script's model (r228970,r229196,r229197,r229198). The
python script just massages stdin and writes the result to stdout, I
then wrapped that in a shell script to handle replacing files, then
using the usual find+xargs to migrate all the files.
update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re
ibrep = re.compile(r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr inbounds )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
normrep = re.compile( r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
def conv(match, line):
if not match:
return line
line = match.groups()[0]
if len(match.groups()[5]) == 0:
line += match.groups()[2]
line += match.groups()[3]
line += ", "
line += match.groups()[1]
line += "\n"
return line
for line in sys.stdin:
if line.find("getelementptr ") == line.find("getelementptr inbounds"):
if line.find("getelementptr inbounds") != line.find("getelementptr inbounds ("):
line = conv(re.match(ibrep, line), line)
elif line.find("getelementptr ") != line.find("getelementptr ("):
line = conv(re.match(normrep, line), line)
sys.stdout.write(line)
apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
rm -f "$name.tmp"
done
The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
After that, check-all (with llvm, clang, clang-tools-extra, lld,
compiler-rt, and polly all checked out).
The extra 'rm' in the apply.sh script is due to a few files in clang's test
suite using interesting unicode stuff that my python script was throwing
exceptions on. None of those files needed to be migrated, so it seemed
sufficient to ignore those cases.
Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7636
llvm-svn: 230786
Function pointers were not correctly handled by the dumper, and
they would print as "* name". They now print as
"int (__cdecl *name)(int arg1, int arg2)" as they should.
Also, doubles were being printed as floats. This fixes that bug
as well, and adds tests for all builtin types. as well as a test
for function pointers.
llvm-svn: 230703
This adds the --class-definitions flag. If specified, when dumping
types, instead of "class Foo" you will see the full class definition,
with member functions, constructors, access specifiers.
NOTE: Using this option can be very slow, as generating a full class
definition requires accessing many different parts of the PDB.
llvm-svn: 230203
This increases the flexibility of how to dump different
symbol types -- necessary for context-sensitive formatting of
symbol types -- and also improves the modularity by allowing
the dumping to be implemented in the actual dumper, as opposed
to in the PDB library.
llvm-svn: 230184
This removes a wealth of options, and instead now only provides
three options. -symbols, -types, and -compilands. This greatly
simplifies use of the tool, and makes it easier to understand
what you're going to see when you run the tool.
llvm-svn: 230182
NOTE: This patch intentionally breaks the build. It attempts
to resubmit r230083, but with some debug logging in the CMake
and lit config files to determine why certain bots do not
correctly disable the DIA tests when DIA is not available.
After a sufficient number of bots fail, this patch will either
be reverted or, if the cause of the failure becomes obvious,
a fix submitted with the log statements removed.
llvm-svn: 230161
This adds only a very basic set of tests that dump a few
functions and object files.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7656
Reviewed By: David Blaikie
llvm-svn: 230083
There's no way for `DIBuilder` to create a subprogram or global variable
where `getName()` and `getDisplayName()` give different answers. This
testcase managed to achieve the feat though. This was probably just
left behind in some sort of upgrade along the way.
llvm-svn: 229930
This will help us study the format of individual symbol
records more closely.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7664
Reviewed by: Timur Iskhodzhanov
llvm-svn: 229730
for any padding introduced by SROA. In particular, do not emit debug info
for an alloca that represents only the padding introduced by a previous
iteration.
Fixes PR22495.
llvm-svn: 228632
intermediate representation. This
- increases consistency by using the same granularity everywhere
- allows for pieces < 1 byte
- DW_OP_piece didn't actually allow storing an offset.
Part of PR22495.
llvm-svn: 228631
Remove handling for DW_TAG_constant. We started producing it in
r110656, but reverted that in r110876 without dropping the support.
Finish the job.
llvm-svn: 228623
COFF section flags are not idempotent:
'rd' will make a read-write section because 'd' implies write
'dr' will make a read-only section because 'r' disables write
llvm-svn: 228490
described by integer constants. This is a bit ugly, but if the source
language allows arbitrary type casting, the debug info must follow suit.
For example:
void foo() {
float a;
*(int *)&a = 0;
}
For the curious: SROA replaces the float alloca with an i32 alloca, which
is then optimized away and described via dbg.value(i32 0, ...).
llvm-svn: 227827
aggregate or scalar, the debug info needs to refer to the absolute offset
(relative to the entire variable) instead of storing the offset inside
the smaller aggregate.
llvm-svn: 227702
Same sort of bug as on ARM where the cmp+branch are lowered to br_cc
(choosing the branch's debugloc for the br_cc's debugloc) then expanded
out to a cmp and a br, but both using the debug loc of the br_cc, thus
losing fidelity.
llvm-svn: 227645
Also revert r227489 since it didn't actually fix the thing I thought I
was fixing (since the test case was targeting the wrong architecture
initially). The change might be correct & demonstrated by other test
cases, but it's not a priority for me to find those test cases right
now.
Filed PR22417 for the failure.
llvm-svn: 227632
physical register that is described in a DBG_VALUE.
In the testcase the DBG_VALUE describing "p5" becomes unavailable
because the register its address is in is clobbered and we (currently)
aren't smart enough to realize that the value is rematerialized immediately
after the DBG_VALUE and/or is actually a stack slot.
llvm-svn: 227056
Summary:
At the moment, address calculation is taking the debug line info from the
address node (e.g. TargetGlobalAddress). When a function is called multiple
times, this results in output of the form:
.loc $first_call_location
.. address calculation ..
.. function call ..
.. address calculation ..
.loc $second_call_location
.. function call ..
.loc $first_call_location
.. address calculation ..
.loc $third_call_location
.. function call ..
This patch makes address calculations for function calls take the debug line
info for the call node and results in output of the form:
.loc $first_call_location
.. address calculation ..
.. function call ..
.loc $second_call_location
.. address calculation ..
.. function call ..
.loc $third_call_location
.. address calculation ..
.. function call ..
All other address calculations continue to use the address node.
Test Plan: Fixes test/DebugInfo/multiline.ll on a mips host.
Subscribers: dblaikie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7050
llvm-svn: 227005
When two calls from the same MDLocation are inlined they currently get
treated as one inlined function call (creating difficulty debugging,
duplicate variables, etc).
Clang worked around this by including column information on inline calls
which doesn't address LTO inlining or calls to the same function from
the same line and column (such as through a macro). It also didn't
address ctor and member function calls.
By making the inlinedAt locations distinct, every call site has an
explicitly distinct location that cannot be coalesced with any other
call.
This can produce linearly (2x in the worst case where every call is
inlined and the call instruction has a non-call instruction at the same
location) more debug locations. Any increase beyond that are in cases
where the Clang workaround was insufficient and the new scheme is
creating necessary distinct nodes that were being erroneously coalesced
previously.
After this change to LLVM the incomplete workarounds in Clang. That
should reduce the number of debug locations (in a build without column
info, the default on Darwin, not the default on Linux) by not creating
pseudo-distinct locations for every call to an inline function.
(oh, and I made the inlined-at chain rebuilding iterative instead of
recursive because I was having trouble wrapping my head around it the
way it was - open to discussion on the right design for that function
(including going back to a recursive solution))
llvm-svn: 226736
This reapplies r225379.
ChangeLog:
- The assertion that this commit previously ran into about the inability
to handle indirect variables has since been removed and the backend
can handle this now.
- Testcases were upgrade to the new MDLocation format.
- Instead of keeping a DebugDeclares map, we now use
llvm::FindAllocaDbgDeclare().
Original commit message follows.
Debug info: Teach SROA how to update debug info for fragmented variables.
This allows us to generate debug info for extremely advanced code such as
typedef struct { long int a; int b;} S;
int foo(S s) {
return s.b;
}
which at -O1 on x86_64 is codegen'd into
define i32 @foo(i64 %s.coerce0, i32 %s.coerce1) #0 {
ret i32 %s.coerce1, !dbg !24
}
with this patch we emit the following debug info for this
TAG_formal_parameter [3]
AT_location( 0x00000000
0x0000000000000000 - 0x0000000000000006: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rsi, piece 0x00000004
0x0000000000000006 - 0x0000000000000008: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rax, piece 0x00000004 )
AT_name( "s" )
AT_decl_file( "/Volumes/Data/llvm/_build.ninja.release/test.c" )
Thanks to chandlerc, dblaikie, and echristo for their feedback on all
previous iterations of this patch!
llvm-svn: 226598
frontends to use a DIExpression with a DW_OP_deref instead.
This is not only a much more natural place for this informationl; there
is also a technical reason: The FlagIndirectVariable is used to mark a
variable that is turned into a reference by virtue of the calling
convention; this happens for example to aggregate return values.
The inliner, for example, may actually need to undo this indirection to
correctly represent the value in its new context. This is impossible to
implement because the DIVariable can't be safely modified. We can however
safely construct a new DIExpression on the fly.
llvm-svn: 226476
This commit moves `MDLocation`, finishing off PR21433. There's an
accompanying clang commit for frontend testcases. I'll attach the
testcase upgrade script I used to PR21433 to help out-of-tree
frontends/backends.
This changes the schema for `DebugLoc` and `DILocation` from:
!{i32 3, i32 7, !7, !8}
to:
!MDLocation(line: 3, column: 7, scope: !7, inlinedAt: !8)
Note that empty fields (line/column: 0 and inlinedAt: null) don't get
printed by the assembly writer.
llvm-svn: 226048
emitDebugLocValue() into DwarfExpression.
Ought to be NFC, but it actually uncovered a bug in the debug-loc-asan.ll
testcase. The testcase checks that the address of variable "y" is stored
at [RSP+16], which also lines up with the comment.
It also check(ed) that the *value* of "y" is stored in RDI before that,
but that is actually incorrect, since RDI is the very value that is
stored in [RSP+16]. Here's the assembler output:
movb 2147450880(%rcx), %r8b
#DEBUG_VALUE: bar:y <- RDI
cmpb $0, %r8b
movq %rax, 32(%rsp) # 8-byte Spill
movq %rsi, 24(%rsp) # 8-byte Spill
movq %rdi, 16(%rsp) # 8-byte Spill
.Ltmp3:
#DEBUG_VALUE: bar:y <- [RSP+16]
Fixed the comment to spell out the correct register and the check to
expect an address rather than a value.
Note that the range that is emitted for the RDI location was and is still
wrong, it claims to begin at the function prologue, but really it should
start where RDI is first assigned.
llvm-svn: 225851
The ppc64le platform will emit a .localentry directive. This is triggering
a false-positive against a CHECK-NOT: .loc in multiline.ll.
Add a space "{{ }}" to the check-not line to allow for arguments, and
prevent .localentry from matching.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6935
llvm-svn: 225810
into a new class DwarfExpression that can be shared between AsmPrinter
and DwarfUnit.
This is the first step towards unifying the two entirely redundant
implementations of dwarf expression emission in DwarfUnit and AsmPrinter.
Almost no functional change — Testcases were updated because asm comments
that used to be on two lines now appear on the same line, which is
actually preferable.
llvm-svn: 225706
This also rolls in the changes discussed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D6766.
Defers migrating the debug info for new allocas until after all partitions
are created.
Thanks to Chandler for reviewing!
llvm-svn: 225272
Too many different comment characters - instead of trying to account for
them all, instead disable the comments and just check for end-of-line
instead.
llvm-svn: 225020
GCC does this for non-zero discriminators and since GCC doesn't produce
column info, that was the only place it comes up there. For LLVM, since
we can emit discriminators and/or column info, it makes more sense to
invert the condition and just test for changes in line number.
This should resolve at least some of the GDB 7.5 test suite failures
created by recent Clang changes that increase the location fidelity
(which, since Clang defaults to including column info on Linux by
default created a bunch of cases that confused GDB).
In theory we could do this better/differently by grouping actual source
statements together in a similar manner to the way lexical scopes are
handled but given that GDB isn't really in a position to consume that (&
users are probably somewhat used to different lines being different
'statements') this seems the safest and cheapest change. (I'm concerned
that doing this 'right' would bloat the debugloc data even further -
something Duncan's working hard to address)
llvm-svn: 225011
Correct the line information generation for preprocessed assembly. Although we
tracked the source information for the macro instantiation, we failed to account
for the fact that we were instantiating a macro, which is populated into a new
buffer and that the line information would be relative to the definition rather
than the actual instantiation location. This could cause the line number
associated with the statement to be very high due to wrapping of the difference
calculated for the preprocessor line information emitted into the stream.
Properly calculate the line for the macro instantiation, referencing the line
where the macro is actually used as GCC/gas do.
The test case uses x86, though the same problem exists on any other target using
the LLVM IAS.
llvm-svn: 224810
fragmented variables.
This caused codegen to start crashing when we built somewhat large
programs with debug info and optimizations. 'check-msan' hit in, and
I suspect a bootstrap would as well. I mailed a test case to the
review thread.
llvm-svn: 224750
Followup to r224294:
ARM/AArch64: Attach the FrameSetup MIFlag to CFI instructions.
Debug info marks the first instruction without the FrameSetup flag
as being the end of the function prologue. Any CFI instructions in the
middle of the function prologue would cause debug info to end the prologue
too early and worse, attach the line number of the CFI instruction, which
incidentally is often 0.
llvm-svn: 224743
This allows us to generate debug info for extremely advanced code such as
typedef struct { long int a; int b;} S;
int foo(S s) {
return s.b;
}
which at -O1 on x86_64 is codegen'd into
define i32 @foo(i64 %s.coerce0, i32 %s.coerce1) #0 {
ret i32 %s.coerce1, !dbg !24
}
with this patch we emit the following debug info for this
TAG_formal_parameter [3]
AT_location( 0x00000000
0x0000000000000000 - 0x0000000000000006: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rsi, piece 0x00000004
0x0000000000000006 - 0x0000000000000008: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rax, piece 0x00000004 )
AT_name( "s" )
AT_decl_file( "/Volumes/Data/llvm/_build.ninja.release/test.c" )
Thanks to chandlerc, dblaikie, and echristo for their feedback on all
previous iterations of this patch!
llvm-svn: 224739
Debug info marks the first instruction without the FrameSetup flag
as being the end of the function prologue. Any CFI instructions in the
middle of the function prologue would cause debug info to end the prologue
too early and worse, attach the line number of the CFI instruction, which
incidentally is often 0.
llvm-svn: 224294
Now that `Metadata` is typeless, reflect that in the assembly. These
are the matching assembly changes for the metadata/value split in
r223802.
- Only use the `metadata` type when referencing metadata from a call
intrinsic -- i.e., only when it's used as a `Value`.
- Stop pretending that `ValueAsMetadata` is wrapped in an `MDNode`
when referencing it from call intrinsics.
So, assembly like this:
define @foo(i32 %v) {
call void @llvm.foo(metadata !{i32 %v}, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata !{i32 7}, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata !1, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata !3, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata !{metadata !3}, metadata !0)
ret void, !bar !2
}
!0 = metadata !{metadata !2}
!1 = metadata !{i32* @global}
!2 = metadata !{metadata !3}
!3 = metadata !{}
turns into this:
define @foo(i32 %v) {
call void @llvm.foo(metadata i32 %v, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata i32 7, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata i32* @global, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata !3, metadata !0)
call void @llvm.foo(metadata !{!3}, metadata !0)
ret void, !bar !2
}
!0 = !{!2}
!1 = !{i32* @global}
!2 = !{!3}
!3 = !{}
I wrote an upgrade script that handled almost all of the tests in llvm
and many of the tests in cfe (even handling many `CHECK` lines). I've
attached it (or will attach it in a moment if you're speedy) to PR21532
to help everyone update their out-of-tree testcases.
This is part of PR21532.
llvm-svn: 224257
DW_OP_const <const> doesn't describe a constant value, but a value at a constant address.
The proper way to describe a constant value is DW_OP_constu <const>, DW_OP_stack_value.
Added DW_OP_stack_value to the stack.
Marked incorrect-variable-debugloc1.ll to xfail for PowerPC64, while the the failure (PR21881)
is being investigated.
llvm-svn: 224098
The test is failing for llvm-ppc64 because for this platform the location list is not being generated at all (most likely because of the bug in PPC code optimization or generation). I will file a bug agains PPC compiler, but meanwhile, until PPC bug is fixed, I will have to revert my change.
llvm-svn: 224000
DW_OP_const <const> doesn't describe a constant value, but a value at a constant address.
The proper way to describe a constant value is DW_OP_constu <const>, DW_OP_stack_value.
Added DW_OP_stack_value to the stack.
-This line, and those below, will be ignored--
M lib/CodeGen/AsmPrinter/DwarfDebug.cpp
A test/DebugInfo/incorrect-variable-debugloc1.ll
llvm-svn: 223981
replaceDbgDeclareForAlloca() replaces an alloca by a value storing the
address of what was the alloca. If there is a dbg.declare corresponding
to that alloca, we need to lower it to a dbg.value describing the additional
dereference operation to be performed to get to the underlying variable.
This is done by adding a DW_OP_deref to the complex location part of the
location description. This deref was added to the end of the operation list,
which is wrong. The expression applies to what is described by the
dbg.{declare,value}, and as we are changing this, we need to apply the
DW_OP_deref as the first operation in the list.
Part of the fix for rdar://19162268.
llvm-svn: 223799
Usually global variables are in a retain list and instanciated before
any call to constructImportedEntityDIE is made. This isn't true for
forward declarations though.
The testcase for this change is generated by a clang patched to emit
such forward declarations (patch at http://reviews.llvm.org/D6173
which will land soon). The updated testcase tests more than just
global variables, it now tests every type of 'using' clause we
support.
llvm-svn: 222217
use DIScopeRef.
A paired commit at clang will follow to show cases where we will use an
identifer for the context of a global variable.
rdar://18958417
llvm-svn: 222195
ELF targets (and maybe COFF) use relocations when referring
to strings in the .debug_str section. Handle that in the
accelerator table dumper. This commit restores the
test/DebugInfo/cross-cu-inlining.ll test to its expected
platform independant form, validating that the fix works
(this test failed on linux boxes).
llvm-svn: 222029
If this workaround gets the bots green, then we have to find out
why the -dwarf-accel-tables=Enable option doesn't work as
expected on non-darwin platforms.
llvm-svn: 222007
This reverts commit r221842 which was a revert of r221836 and of the
test parts of r221837.
This new version fixes an UB bug pointed out by David (along with
addressing some other review comments), makes some dumping more
resilient to broken input data and forces the accelerator tables
to be dumped in the tests where we use them (this decision is
platform specific otherwise).
llvm-svn: 222003
This reverts commit r221836.
The tests are asserting on some buildbots. This also reverts the
test part of r221837 as it relies on dwarfdump dumping the
accelerator tables.
llvm-svn: 221842
The DIE offset in the accel tables is an offset relative to the start
of the debug_info section, but we were encoding the offset to the
start of the containing CU.
llvm-svn: 221837
Clang -gsplit-dwarf self-host -O0, binary increases by 0.0005%, -O2,
binary increases by 25%.
A large binary inside Google, split-dwarf, -O0, and other internal flags
(GDB index, etc) increases by 1.8%, optimized build is 35%.
The size impact may be somewhat greater in .o files (I haven't measured
that much - since the linked executable -O0 numbers seemed low enough)
due to relocations. These relocations could be removed if we taught the
llvm-symbolizer to handle indexed addressing in the .o file (GDB can't
cope with this just yet, but GDB won't be reading this info anyway).
Also debug_ranges could be shared between .o and .dwo, though ideally
debug_ranges would get a schema that could used index(+offset)
addressing, and move to the .dwo file, then we'd be back to sharing
addresses in the address pool again.
But for now, these sizes seem small enough to go ahead with this.
Verified that no other DW_TAGs are produced into the .o file other than
subprograms and inlined_subroutines.
llvm-svn: 221306
This is experimental, just barely enough to get things to not
immediately combust.
A note for those who are curious:
Only lld can successfully link the object files, other linkers truncate
the section names making the debug sections illegible to debuggers.
Even with this in mind, we believe we are having trouble with SECREL
relocations.
llvm-svn: 221245
When LLVM emits DWARF call frame information, it currently creates a local,
section-relative symbol in the code section, which is pointed to by a
relocation on the .eh_frame section. However, for C++ we emit some functions in
section groups, and the SysV ABI has some rules to make it easier to remove
these sections
(http://www.sco.com/developers/gabi/latest/ch4.sheader.html#section_group_rules):
A symbol table entry with STB_LOCAL binding that is defined relative to one
of a group's sections, and that is contained in a symbol table section that is
not part of the group, must be discarded if the group members are discarded.
References to this symbol table entry from outside the group are not allowed.
This means that we need to use the function symbol for the relocation, not a
temporary symbol.
There was a comment in the code claiming that the local symbol was used to
avoid creating a relocation, but a relocation must be created anyway as the
code and CFI are in different sections.
llvm-svn: 221150
This was a compile-unit specific label (unused in type units) and seems
unnecessary anyway when we can more easily directly compute the size of
the compile unit.
llvm-svn: 221067
While refactoring this code I was confused by both the name I had
introduced (addNonArgumentVariable... but it has all this logic to
handle argument numbering and keep things in order?) and by the
redundancy. Seems when I fixed the misordered inlined argument handling,
I didn't realize it was mostly redundant with the argument ordering code
(which I may've also written, I'm not sure). So let's just rely on the
more general case.
The only oddity in output this produces is that it means when we emit
all the variables for the current function, we don't track when we've
finished the argument variables and are about to start the local
variables and insert DW_AT_unspecified_parameters (for varargs
functions) there. Instead it ends up after the local variables, scopes,
etc. But this isn't invalid and doesn't cause DWARF consumers problems
that I know of... so we'll just go with that because it makes the code
nice & simple.
(though, let's see what the buildbots have to say about this - *crosses
fingers*)
There will be some cleanup commits to follow to remove the now trivial
wrappers, etc.
llvm-svn: 220527
This fixes a bug (introduced by fixing the IR emitted from Clang where
the definition of a static member would be scoped within the class,
rather than within its lexical decl context) where the definition of a
static variable would be placed inside a class.
It also improves source fidelity by scoping static class member
definitions inside the lexical decl context in which tehy are written
(eg: namespace n { class foo { static int i; } int foo::i; } - the
definition of 'i' will be within the namespace 'n' in the DWARF output
now).
Lastly, and the original goal, this reduces debug info size slightly
(and makes debug info easier to read, etc) by placing the definitions of
non-member global variables within their namespace, rather than using a
separate namespace-scoped declaration along with a definition at global
scope.
Based on patches and discussion with Frédéric.
llvm-svn: 220497
Every target we support has support for assembly that looks like
a = b - c
.long a
What is special about MachO is that the above combination suppresses the
production of a relocation.
With this change we avoid producing the intermediary labels when they don't
add any value.
llvm-svn: 220256
When functions are inlined, instructions without debug information are
attributed to the call site's DebugLoc. After inlining, inlined static
allocas are moved to the caller's entry block, adjacent to the caller's
original static alloca instructions. By retaining the call site's
DebugLoc, these instructions could cause instructions that were
subsequently inserted at the entry block to pick up the same DebugLoc.
Patch by Wolfgang Pieb!
llvm-svn: 220255
This change depends on the ApplePropertyString helper that I sent spearately.
Not sure how you want this tested: as a tool test by adding a binary to dump, or as an llvm test starting from an IR file?
Reviewers: dblaikie, samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5689
llvm-svn: 219507
DW_AT_specification and DW_AT_abstract_origin resolving was only performed
on subroutine DIEs because it used the getSubroutineName method. Introduce
a more generic getName() and use it to dump the reference attributes.
Testcases have been updated to check the printed names instead of the offsets
except when the name could be ambiguous.
Reviewers: dblaikie, samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5625
llvm-svn: 219506
output of the llvm-dwarfdump and llvm-objdump report the endianness
used when the object files were generated.
Patch by Charlie Turner.
llvm-svn: 219110
This reverts commit r218918, effectively reapplying r218914 after fixing
an Ocaml bindings test and an Asan crash. The root cause of the latter
was a tightened-up check in `DILexicalBlock::Verify()`, so I'll file a
PR to investigate who requires the loose check (and why).
Original commit message follows.
--
This patch addresses the first stage of PR17891 by folding constant
arguments together into a single MDString. Integers are stringified and
a `\0` character is used as a separator.
Part of PR17891.
Note: I've attached my testcases upgrade scripts to the PR. If I've
just broken your out-of-tree testcases, they might help.
llvm-svn: 219010
This patch addresses the first stage of PR17891 by folding constant
arguments together into a single MDString. Integers are stringified and
a `\0` character is used as a separator.
Part of PR17891.
Note: I've attached my testcases upgrade scripts to the PR. If I've
just broken your out-of-tree testcases, they might help.
llvm-svn: 218914
argument of the llvm.dbg.declare/llvm.dbg.value intrinsics.
Previously, DIVariable was a variable-length field that has an optional
reference to a Metadata array consisting of a variable number of
complex address expressions. In the case of OpPiece expressions this is
wasting a lot of storage in IR, because when an aggregate type is, e.g.,
SROA'd into all of its n individual members, the IR will contain n copies
of the DIVariable, all alike, only differing in the complex address
reference at the end.
By making the complex address into an extra argument of the
dbg.value/dbg.declare intrinsics, all of the pieces can reference the
same variable and the complex address expressions can be uniqued across
the CU, too.
Down the road, this will allow us to move other flags, such as
"indirection" out of the DIVariable, too.
The new intrinsics look like this:
declare void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata %storage, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
declare void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata %storage, i64 %offset, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
This patch adds a new LLVM-local tag to DIExpressions, so we can detect
and pretty-print DIExpression metadata nodes.
What this patch doesn't do:
This patch does not touch the "Indirect" field in DIVariable; but moving
that into the expression would be a natural next step.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4919
rdar://problem/17994491
Thanks to dblaikie and dexonsmith for reviewing this patch!
Note: I accidentally committed a bogus older version of this patch previously.
llvm-svn: 218787
argument of the llvm.dbg.declare/llvm.dbg.value intrinsics.
Previously, DIVariable was a variable-length field that has an optional
reference to a Metadata array consisting of a variable number of
complex address expressions. In the case of OpPiece expressions this is
wasting a lot of storage in IR, because when an aggregate type is, e.g.,
SROA'd into all of its n individual members, the IR will contain n copies
of the DIVariable, all alike, only differing in the complex address
reference at the end.
By making the complex address into an extra argument of the
dbg.value/dbg.declare intrinsics, all of the pieces can reference the
same variable and the complex address expressions can be uniqued across
the CU, too.
Down the road, this will allow us to move other flags, such as
"indirection" out of the DIVariable, too.
The new intrinsics look like this:
declare void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata %storage, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
declare void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata %storage, i64 %offset, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
This patch adds a new LLVM-local tag to DIExpressions, so we can detect
and pretty-print DIExpression metadata nodes.
What this patch doesn't do:
This patch does not touch the "Indirect" field in DIVariable; but moving
that into the expression would be a natural next step.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4919
rdar://problem/17994491
Thanks to dblaikie and dexonsmith for reviewing this patch!
llvm-svn: 218778
This allows proper disambiguation of unbounded arrays and arrays of zero
bound ("struct foo { int x[]; };" and "struct foo { int x[0]; }"). GCC
instead produces an upper bound of -1 in the latter situation, but count
seems tidier. This way lower_bound is provided if it's not the language
default and count is provided if the count is known, otherwise it's
omitted. Simple.
If someone wants to look at rdar://problem/12566646 and see if this
change is acceptable to that bug/fix, that might be helpful (see the
empty-and-one-elem-array.ll test case which cites that radar).
llvm-svn: 218726
r218129 omits DW_TAG_subprograms which have no inlined subroutines when
emitting -gmlt data. This makes -gmlt very low cost for -O0 builds.
Darwin's dsymutil reasonably considers a CU empty if it has no
subprograms (which occurs with the above optimization in -O0 programs
without any force_inline function calls) and drops the line table, CU,
and everything in this situation, making backtraces impossible.
Until dsymutil is modified to account for this, disable this
optimization on Darwin to preserve the desired functionality.
(see r218545, which should be reverted after this patch, for other
discussion/details)
Footnote:
In the long term, it doesn't look like this scheme (of simplified debug
info to describe inlining to enable backtracing) is tenable, it is far
too size inefficient for optimized code (the DW_TAG_inlined_subprograms,
even once compressed, are nearly twice as large as the line table
itself (also compressed)) and we'll be considering things like Cary's
two level line table proposal to encode all this information directly in
the line table.
llvm-svn: 218702
This change replaces the brittle if/else chain of string comparisons
with a switch statement on the detected target triple, removing the
need for testing arbitrary architecture names returned from
getFileFormatName, whose primary purpose seems to be for display
(user-interface) purposes. The visitor now takes a reference to the
object file, rather than its arbitrary file format name to figure out
whether the file is a 32 or 64-bit object file and what the detected
target triple is.
A set of tests have been added to help show that the refactoring processes
relocations for the same targets as the original code.
Patch by Charlie Turner.
llvm-svn: 218406
This reverts commit faac033f7364bb4226e22c8079c221c96af10d02.
The test depends on all targets to be enabled in llc in order to pass,
and needs to be rewritten/refactored to not have that dependency.
llvm-svn: 218393
This change replaces the brittle if/else chain of string comparisons
with a switch statement on the detected target triple, removing the
need for testing arbitrary architecture names returned from
getFileFormatName, whose primary purpose seems to be for display
(user-interface) purposes. The visitor now takes a reference to the
object file, rather than its arbitrary file format name to figure out
whether the file is a 32 or 64-bit object file and what the detected
target triple is.
A set of tests have been added to help show that the refactoring processes
relocations for the same targets as the original code.
Patch by Charlie Turner.
llvm-svn: 218388
Summary: getSubroutineName is currently only used by llvm-symbolizer, thus add a binary test containing a cross-cu inlining example.
Reviewers: samsonov, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5394
llvm-svn: 218245
To reduce the size of -gmlt data, skip the subprograms without any
inlined subroutines. Since we've now got the ability to make these
determinations in the backend (funnily enough - we added the flag so we
wouldn't produce ranges under -gmlt, but with this change we use the
flag, but go back to producing ranges under -gmlt).
Instead, just produce CU ranges to inform the consumer which parts of
the code are described by this CU's line table. Tools could inspect the
line table directly to compute the range, but the CU ranges only seem to
be about 0.5% of object/executable size, so I'm not too worried about
teaching llvm-symbolizer that trick just yet - it's certainly a possible
piece of future work.
Update an llvm-symbolizer test just to demonstrate that this schema is
acceptable there (if it wasn't, the compiler-rt tests would catch this,
but good to have an in-llvm-tree test for llvm-symbolizer's behavior
here)
Building the clang binary with -gmlt with this patch reduces the total
size of object files by 5.1% (5.56% without ranges) without compression
and the executable by 4.37% (4.75% without ranges).
llvm-svn: 218129
This omission will be done in a fancier manner once we're dealing with
"put gmlt in the skeleton CUs under fission" - it'll have to be
conditional on the kind of CU we're emitting into (skeleton or gmlt).
llvm-svn: 218098
It's probably not a huge deal to not do this - if we could, maybe the
address could be reused by a subprogram low_pc and avoid an extra
relocation, but it's just one per CU at best.
llvm-svn: 217338
DWARF address ranges contain a reference to the debug_info section. This offset
is an absolute relocation except on non-PE/COFF targets where it is section
relative. We would emit this incorrectly, and trying to map the debug info from
the address would fail.
llvm-svn: 217317
The header contains an offset to the DWARF line table for the CU. The offset
must be section relative for COFF and absolute for others. The non-assembly
code path for the DWARF header generation already has the correct emission for
the headers. This corrects the assembly input path.
This was identified by BFD objecting to the LLVM generated DWARF information.
llvm-svn: 217222