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
The way DIA SDK works is that when you request a symbol, it
gets assigned an internal identifier that is unique for the
life of the session. You can then use this identifier to
get back the same symbol, with all of the same internal state
that it had before, even if you "destroyed" the original
copy of the object you had.
This didn't work properly in our native implementation, and
if you destroyed an object for a particular symbol, then
requested the same symbol again, it would get assigned a new
ID and you'd get a fresh copy of the object. In order to fix
this some refactoring had to happen to properly reuse cached
objects. Some unittests are added to verify that symbol
reuse is taking place, making use of the new unittest input
feature.
llvm-svn: 341503
Previously the dumping of class definitions was very primitive,
and it made it hard to do more than the most trivial of output
formats when dumping. As such, we would only dump one line for
each field, and then dump non-layout items like nested types
and enums.
With this patch, we do a complete analysis of the object
hierarchy including aggregate types, bases, virtual bases,
vftable analysis, etc. The only immediately visible effects
of this are that a) we can now dump a line for the vfptr where
before we would treat that as padding, and b) we now don't
treat virtual bases that come at the end of a class as padding
since we have a more detailed analysis of the class's storage
usage.
In subsequent patches, we should be able to use this analysis
to display a complete graphical view of a class's layout including
recursing arbitrarily deep into an object's base class / aggregate
member hierarchy.
llvm-svn: 300133
1. Added some asserts to make sure concrete symbol types don't
get constructed with RawSymbols that have an incompatible
SymTag enum value.
2. Added new forwarding macros that auto-define an Id/Sym method
pair whenever there is a method that returns a SymIndexId.
Previously we would just provide one method that returned only
the SymIndexId and it was up to the caller to use the Session
object to get a pointer to the symbol. Now we automatically
get both the method that returns the Id, as well as a method
that returns the pointer directly with just one macro.
3. Added some methods for dumping straight to stdout that can
be used from inside the debugger for diagnostics during a
debug session.
4. Added a clone() method and a cast<T>() method to PDBSymbol
that can shorten some usage patterns.
llvm-svn: 299831
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
Dumping the global scope contains a lot of very uninteresting
things and is generally polluted with a lot of random junk.
Furthermore, it dumps values unsorted, making it hard to read.
This patch dumps known interesting types only, and as a side
effect sorts the list by symbol type.
llvm-svn: 229232
This correctly prints the function pointers, and also prints
function signatures for symbols as opposed to just types. So
actual functions in your program will now be printed with full
name and signature, as opposed to just name as before.
llvm-svn: 229129
In particular this patch adds the ability to dump complete
function signature information including argument types as
correctly formatted strings. A side effect of this is that
almost all symbol and meta types are now formatted.
llvm-svn: 229076
This patch adds a number of improvements to llvm-pdbdump.
1) Dumping of the entire global scope, and not only those
symbols that live in individual compilands.
2) Prepend class name to member functions and data
3) Improved display of bitfields.
4) Support for dumping more kinds of data symbols.
llvm-svn: 229012
This makes llvm-pdbdump available on all platforms, although it
will currently fail to create a dumper if there is no PDB reader
implementation for the current platform.
It implements dumping of compilands and children, which is less
information than was previously available, but it has to be
rewritten from scratch using the new set of interfaces, so the
rest of the functionality will be added back in subsequent commits.
llvm-svn: 228755
Dumping a symbol often requires access to data that isn't inside
the symbol hierarchy, but which is only accessible through the
top-level session. This patch is a pure interface change to give
symbols a reference to the session.
llvm-svn: 228542
This patch implements a few of the optional suggestions from the
initial patch comitting libpdb. In particular, it implements a
virtual function out of line for each of the concrete classes.
A few other minor cleanups exist as well, such as using override
instead of virtual, etc.
llvm-svn: 228516