This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
Instructions marked as FrameSetup do not cause requestLabelAfterInsn to
be called and so no such label is generated. Call instructions which
require call site entries to be generated require this label to be
present in order to calculate the return PC offset/address, but the
check for whether the call instruction is marked as FrameSetup was not
present.
Therefore in the case where a call instruction is marked as FrameSetup,
an assertion failure occurs if a call site entry is to be generated.
This is the case with RISC-V's implementation of save/restore via
library calls.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71593
Add the isCandidateForCallSiteEntry predicate to MachineInstr to
determine whether a DWARF call site entry should be created for an
instruction.
For now, it's enough to have any call instruction that doesn't belong to
a blacklisted set of opcodes. For these opcodes, a call site entry isn't
meaningful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74159
Summary:
This patch reorders the emission of debug_str section, so that
string can come after macros.
This is necessary for macro forms like DW_MACRO_define_strp,
which emits macro as a string in debug_str section.
Originally committed in: 1ced28cbe7
Reverted in: f75301d16d
(reverted due to tests failing on non-linux/x86 targets, tests have since been
generalized and specialized... since Split DWARF isn't supported on non-elf
targets anyway and we have no way to run on "whatever elf target is available"
so they fail on MacOS without an explicit target triple)
This code was incorrectly emitting extra bytes into arbitrary parts of
the object file when it was meant to be hashing them to compute the DWO
ID.
Follow-up patch(es) will refactor this API somewhat to make such bugs
harder to introduce, hopefully.
This code was incorrectly emitting extra bytes into arbitrary parts of
the object file when it was meant to be hashing them to compute the DWO
ID.
Follow-up patch(es) will refactor this API somewhat to make such bugs
harder to introduce, hopefully.
This is a revert-of-revert (i.e. this reverts commit 802bec89, which
itself reverted fa4701e1 and 79daafc9) with a fix folded in. The problem
was that call site tags weren't emitted properly when LTO was enabled
along with split-dwarf. This required a minor fix. I've added a reduced
test case in test/DebugInfo/X86/fission-call-site.ll.
Original commit message:
This allows a call site tag in CU A to reference a callee DIE in CU B
without resorting to creating an incomplete duplicate DIE for the callee
inside of CU A.
We already allow cross-CU references of subprogram declarations, so it
doesn't seem like definitions ought to be special.
This improves entry value evaluation and tail call frame synthesis in
the LTO setting. During LTO, it's common for cross-module inlining to
produce a call in some CU A where the callee resides in a different CU,
and there is no declaration subprogram for the callee anywhere. In this
case llvm would (unnecessarily, I think) emit an empty DW_TAG_subprogram
in order to fill in the call site tag. That empty 'definition' defeats
entry value evaluation etc., because the debugger can't figure out what
it means.
As a follow-up, maybe we could add a DWARF verifier check that a
DW_TAG_subprogram at least has a DW_AT_name attribute.
Update #1:
Reland with a fix to create a declaration DIE when the declaration is
missing from the CU's retainedTypes list. The declaration is left out
of the retainedTypes list in two cases:
1) Re-compiling pre-r266445 bitcode (in which declarations weren't added
to the retainedTypes list), and
2) Doing LTO function importing (which doesn't update the retainedTypes
list).
It's possible to handle (1) and (2) by modifying the retainedTypes list
(in AutoUpgrade, or in the LTO importing logic resp.), but I don't see
an advantage to doing it this way, as it would cause more DWARF to be
emitted compared to creating the declaration DIEs lazily.
Update #2:
Fold in a fix for call site tag emission in the split-dwarf + LTO case.
Tested with a stage2 ThinLTO+RelWithDebInfo build of clang, and with a
ReleaseLTO-g build of the test suite.
rdar://46577651, rdar://57855316, rdar://57840415, rdar://58888440
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70350
The Version was used only to determine the size of an operand of
DW_OP_call_ref. The size was 4 for all versions apart from 2, but
the DW_OP_call_ref operation was introduced only in DWARF3. Thus,
the code may be simplified and using of Version may be eliminated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73264
Summary:
This fixes PR44118. For cases where we have a chain like this:
R8 = R1 (entry value)
R0 = R8
call @foo R0
the code that emits call site entries using entry values would not
follow that chain, instead emitting a call site entry with R8 as
location rather than R0. Such a case was discovered when originally
adding dbgcall-site-orr-moves.mir. This patch fixes that issue. This is
done by changing the ForwardedRegWorklist set to a map in which the
worklist registers always map to the parameter registers that they
describe.
Another thing this patch fixes is that worklist registers now can
describe more than one parameter register at a time. Such a case
occurred in dbgcall-site-interpretation.mir, resulting in a call site
entry not being emitted for one of the parameters.
Reviewers: djtodoro, NikolaPrica, aprantl, vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73168
Summary:
Since D70431 the describeLoadedValue() hook takes a parameter register,
meaning that it can now be asked to describe any register. This means
that we can drop the difference between explicit and implicit defines
that we previously had in collectCallSiteParameters().
I have not found any case for any upstream targets where a parameter
register is only implicitly defined, and does not overlap with any
explicit defines. I don't know if such a case would even make sense. So
as far as I have tested, this patch should be a non-functional change.
However, this reduces the complexity of the code a bit, and it will
simplify the implementation of an upcoming patch which solves PR44118.
Reviewers: djtodoro, NikolaPrica, aprantl, vsk
Reviewed By: djtodoro, vsk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73167
... as well as:
Revert "[DWARF] Defer creating declaration DIEs until we prepare call site info"
This reverts commit fa4701e197.
This reverts commit 79daafc903.
There have been reports of this assert getting hit:
CalleeDIE && "Could not find DIE for call site entry origin
This makes the SectionLabel handling more resilient - specifically for
future PROPELLER work which will have more CU ranges (rather than just
one per function).
Ultimately it might be nice to make this more general/resilient to
arbitrary labels (rather than relying on the labels being created for CU
ranges & then being reused by ranges, loclists, and possibly other
addresses). It's possible that other (non-rnglist/loclist) uses of
addresses will need the addresses to be in SectionLabels earlier (eg:
move the CU.addRange to be done on function begin, rather than function
end, so during function emission they are already populated for other
use).
[this re-applies c0176916a4
with the correct commit message and phabricator link]
This addresses point 1 of PR44213.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44213
The DW_AT_LLVM_sysroot attribute is used for Clang module debug info,
to allow LLDB to import a Clang module from source. Currently it is
part of each DW_TAG_module, however, it is the same for all modules in
a compile unit. It is more efficient and less ambiguous to store it
once in the DW_TAG_compile_unit.
This should have no effect on DWARF consumers other than LLDB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71732
This is a purely cosmetic change that is NFC in terms of the binary
output. I bugs me that I called the attribute DW_AT_LLVM_isysroot
since the "i" is an artifact of GCC command line option syntax
(-isysroot is in the category of -i options) and doesn't carry any
useful information otherwise.
This attribute only appears in Clang module debug info.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71722
This reverts D53469, which changed llvm's DWARF emission to emit
DW_AT_call_return_pc as a function-local offset. Such an encoding is not
compatible with post-link block re-ordering tools and isn't standards-
compliant.
In addition to reverting back to the original DW_AT_call_return_pc
encoding, teach lldb how to fix up DW_AT_call_return_pc when the address
comes from an object file pointed-to by a debug map. While doing this I
noticed that lldb's support for tail calls that cross a DSO/object file
boundary wasn't covered, so I added tests for that. This latter case
exercises the newly added return PC fixup.
The dsymutil changes in this patch were originally included in D49887:
the associated test should be sufficient to test DW_AT_call_return_pc
encoding purely on the llvm side.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72489
It isn't necessary to create DIEs for all of the declaration subprograms
in a CU's retainedTypes list. We can defer creating these subprograms
until we need to prepare a call site tag that refers to one.
This cleanup was mentioned in passing in D70350.
This allows a call site tag in CU A to reference a callee DIE in CU B
without resorting to creating an incomplete duplicate DIE for the callee
inside of CU A.
We already allow cross-CU references of subprogram declarations, so it
doesn't seem like definitions ought to be special.
This improves entry value evaluation and tail call frame synthesis in
the LTO setting. During LTO, it's common for cross-module inlining to
produce a call in some CU A where the callee resides in a different CU,
and there is no declaration subprogram for the callee anywhere. In this
case llvm would (unnecessarily, I think) emit an empty DW_TAG_subprogram
in order to fill in the call site tag. That empty 'definition' defeats
entry value evaluation etc., because the debugger can't figure out what
it means.
As a follow-up, maybe we could add a DWARF verifier check that a
DW_TAG_subprogram at least has a DW_AT_name attribute.
Update:
Reland with a fix to create a declaration DIE when the declaration is
missing from the CU's retainedTypes list. The declaration is left out
of the retainedTypes list in two cases:
1) Re-compiling pre-r266445 bitcode (in which declarations weren't added
to the retainedTypes list), and
2) Doing LTO function importing (which doesn't update the retainedTypes
list).
It's possible to handle (1) and (2) by modifying the retainedTypes list
(in AutoUpgrade, or in the LTO importing logic resp.), but I don't see
an advantage to doing it this way, as it would cause more DWARF to be
emitted compared to creating the declaration DIEs lazily.
Tested with a stage2 ThinLTO+RelWithDebInfo build of clang, and with a
ReleaseLTO-g build of the test suite.
rdar://46577651, rdar://57855316, rdar://57840415
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70350
Extends DWARF expression language to express locals/globals locations. (via
target-index operands atm) (possible variants are: non-virtual registers
or address spaces)
The WebAssemblyExplicitLocals can replace virtual registers to targertindex
operand type at the time when WebAssembly backend introduces
{get,set,tee}_local instead of corresponding virtual registers.
Reviewed By: aprantl, dschuff
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52634
Since the address pool doesn't get populated in this case (due to the
lack of inlining, no child DIEs are added to the CU - so no addresses
are needed for the DIEs themselves) until the range list is emitted - at
the time the attributes are added to the CU, the address pool is empty.
So check whether the address pool will be used for the range lists & add
an addr_base if that's the case.
Move these data structures closer together so their emission code can
eventually share more of its implementation.
Was an egregious bug (completely untested, evidently) where I hadn't
inverted a DWARFv5 test as needed, so it was doing the exact opposite of
what was required & thus tried to emit a DWARFv5 range list header in
DWARFv4.
Reapply 8e04896288 which was
reverted in a8154e5e0c.
added a test case for macinfo.dwo emission."
This was reverted in caa4120906,
since it was causing an assertion failure on Windows bots.
This revision is revised to fix that.
Original commit message -
[DebugInfo] Refactored macro related generation, added a test case for macinfo.dwo emission.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, jini.susan.george
Tags: #debug-info #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71008
(except for v4 loclists, which are sufficiently different to not fit
well in this generic implementation)
In subsequent patches I intend to refactor the DebugLoc and ranges data
structures to be more similar so I can common more of the implementation
here.
Summary:
Support alloca-referencing dbg.value in hwasan instrumentation.
Update AsmPrinter to emit DW_AT_LLVM_tag_offset when location is in
loclist format.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: srhines, aprantl, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70753
This reverts commit 30038da15b. It causes
the stage2 thinLTO bot to fail with:
Assertion failed: (CU.getDIE(CalleeSP) && "Expected declaration subprogram DIE for callee")
rdar://57840415
This allows a call site tag in CU A to reference a callee DIE in CU B
without resorting to creating an incomplete duplicate DIE for the callee
inside of CU A.
We already allow cross-CU references of subprogram declarations, so it
doesn't seem like definitions ought to be special.
This improves entry value evaluation and tail call frame synthesis in
the LTO setting. During LTO, it's common for cross-module inlining to
produce a call in some CU A where the callee resides in a different CU,
and there is no declaration subprogram for the callee anywhere. In this
case llvm would (unnecessarily, I think) emit an empty DW_TAG_subprogram
in order to fill in the call site tag. That empty 'definition' defeats
entry value evaluation etc., because the debugger can't figure out what
it means.
As a follow-up, maybe we could add a DWARF verifier check that a
DW_TAG_subprogram at least has a DW_AT_name attribute.
rdar://46577651
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70350
Summary:
Currently the describeLoadedValue() hook is assumed to describe the
value of the instruction's first explicit define. The hook will not be
called for instructions with more than one explicit define.
This commit adds a register parameter to the describeLoadedValue() hook,
and invokes the hook for all registers in the worklist.
This will allow us to for example describe instructions which produce
more than two parameters' values; e.g. Hexagon's various combine
instructions.
This also fixes situations in our downstream target where we may pass
smaller parameters in the high part of a register. If such a parameter's
value is produced by a larger copy instruction, we can't describe the
call site value using the super-register, and we instead need to know
which sub-register that should be used.
This also allows us to handle cases like this:
$ebx = [...]
$rdi = MOVSX64rr32 $ebx
$esi = MOV32rr $edi
CALL64pcrel32 @call
The hook will first be invoked for the MOV32rr instruction, which will
say that @call's second parameter (passed in $esi) is described by $edi.
As $edi is not preserved it will be added to the worklist. When we get
to the MOVSX64rr32 instruction, we need to describe two values; the
sign-extended value of $ebx -> $rdi for the first parameter, and $ebx ->
$edi for the second parameter, which is now possible.
This commit modifies the dbgcall-site-lea-interpretation.mir test case.
In the test case, the values of some 32-bit parameters were produced
with LEA64r. Perhaps we can in general cases handle such by emitting
expressions that AND out the lower 32-bits, but I have not been able to
land in a case where a LEA64r is used for a 32-bit parameter instead of
LEA64_32 from C code.
I have not found a case where it would be useful to describe parameters
using implicit defines, so in this patch the hook is still only invoked
for explicit defines of forwarding registers.
Reviewers: djtodoro, NikolaPrica, aprantl, vsk
Reviewed By: djtodoro, vsk
Subscribers: ormris, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70431
Currently the describeLoadedValue() hook is assumed to describe the
value of the instruction's first explicit define. The hook will not be
called for instructions with more than one explicit define.
This commit adds a register parameter to the describeLoadedValue() hook,
and invokes the hook for all registers in the worklist.
This will allow us to for example describe instructions which produce
more than two parameters' values; e.g. Hexagon's various combine
instructions.
This also fixes a case in our downstream target where we may pass
smaller parameters in the high part of a register. If such a parameter's
value is produced by a larger copy instruction, we can't describe the
call site value using the super-register, and we instead need to know
which sub-register that should be used.
This also allows us to handle cases like this:
$ebx = [...]
$rdi = MOVSX64rr32 $ebx
$esi = MOV32rr $edi
CALL64pcrel32 @call
The hook will first be invoked for the MOV32rr instruction, which will
say that @call's second parameter (passed in $esi) is described by $edi.
As $edi is not preserved it will be added to the worklist. When we get
to the MOVSX64rr32 instruction, we need to describe two values; the
sign-extended value of $ebx -> $rdi for the first parameter, and $ebx ->
$edi for the second parameter, which is now possible.
This commit modifies the dbgcall-site-lea-interpretation.mir test case.
In the test case, the values of some 32-bit parameters were produced
with LEA64r. Perhaps we can in general cases handle such by emitting
expressions that AND out the lower 32-bits, but I have not been able to
land in a case where a LEA64r is used for a 32-bit parameter instead of
LEA64_32 from C code.
I have not found a case where it would be useful to describe parameters
using implicit defines, so in this patch the hook is still only invoked
for explicit defines of forwarding registers.
This is for the case where -gmlt -gsplit-dwarf -fsplit-dwarf-inlining
are used together in some but not all units during LTO (or, in the
reduced case, even without LTO) - ensuring that no split dwarf is used
(because split-dwarf-inlining puts the same data in the .o file, so
there's no need to duplicate it into the .dwo file)
The loclists_table_base was being overwritten for each CU even though
only one loclists contribution is made so everything but the last CU
would have a label that was never defined and fail to assemble.
Summary:
If a call is bundled then the code that looks for instructions that
produce parameter values would break when reaching the call's bundle
header, due to the `ifCall(/*AnyInBundle*/)` invocation returning true.
It is not enough to simply ignore bundle headers in the `isCall()`
invocation, as the bundle header may have defines of parameter registers
due to the call, meaning that such registers would incorrectly be
removed from the worklist. Therefore, do not look at bundle headers at
all.
Reviewers: djtodoro, NikolaPrica, aprantl, vsk
Reviewed By: aprantl, vsk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71024
That patch fixes incompatible compilation unit type (DW_UT_skeleton) and root DIE (DW_TAG_compile_unit) error.
cat split-dwarf.cpp
int main()
{
int a = 1;
return 0;
}
clang++ -O -g -gsplit-dwarf -gdwarf-5 split-dwarf.cpp; llvm-dwarfdump --verify ./a.out | grep skeleton
error: Compilation unit type (DW_UT_skeleton) and root DIE (DW_TAG_compile_unit) do not match.
The fix is to change DW_TAG_compile_unit into DW_TAG_skeleton_unit when skeleton file is generated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70880
This patch adds support for debug_macinfo.dwo section[pre-standardized]
to llvm and llvm-dwarfdump.
Reviewers: probinson, dblaikie, aprantl, jini.susan.george, alok
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70705
Tags: #debug-info #llvm
The original commit message follows.
This patch adds support for debug_loclists.dwo section in llvm and llvm-dwarfdump.
Also Fixes PR43622, PR43623.
Reviewers: dblaikie, probinson, labath, aprantl, jini.susan.george
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69462
This patch adds support for debug_loclists.dwo section in llvm and llvm-dwarfdump.
Also Fixes PR43622, PR43623.
Reviewers: dblaikie, probinson, labath, aprantl, jini.susan.george
https://reviews.llvm.org/D69462
Summary:
Assert in getFunctionLocalOffsetAfterInsn() fails when processing a call
MachineInstr inside a bundle and compiling with debug info. This is
because labels are added by DwarfDebug::beginInstruction() which is
called for each top-level MI by EmitFunctionBody()'s for-loop iteration
but constructCallSiteEntryDIEs() which calls
getFunctionLocalOffsetAfterInsn() iterates over all MIs.
This commit modifies constructCallSiteEntryDIEs() to get the associated
bundle MI for call MIs inside a bundle and use that to when calling
getFunctionLocalOffsetAfterInsn() and getLabelAfterInsn(). It also skips
loop iterations for bundle MIs since the loop statements are concerned
with debug info for each physical instructions and bundles represent a
group of instructions. It also fix the comment about PCAddr since the
code is getting the return address and not the call address.
Reviewers: dstenb, vsk, aprantl, djtodoro, dblaikie, NikolaPrica
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70293
This only implements the non-dwo part, but loclistx is necessary to use
location lists in DWARFv5, so it's a precursor to that work - and
generally reduces relocations (only using one reloc, then
indexes/relative offsets for all location list references) in non-split
DWARF.
The macinfo support was broken for LTO situations, by terminating
macinfo lists only once - multiple macinfo contributions were correctly
labeled, but they all continued/flowed into later contributions until
only one terminator appeared at the end of the section.
Correctly terminate each contribution & fix the parsing to handle this
situation too. The parsing fix is also necessary for dumping linked
binaries - the previous code would stop at the end of the first
contribution - missing all later contributions in a linked binary.
It'd be nice to improve the dumping to print the offsets of each
contribution so it'd be easier to know which CU AT_macro_info refers to
which macinfo contribution.
Extend the describeLoadedValue() with support for target specific ARM and
AArch64 instructions interpretation. The patch provides specialization for
ADD and SUB operations that include a register and an immediate/offset
operand. Some of the instructions can operate with global string addresses
or constant pool indexes but such cases are omitted since we currently lack
flexible support for processing such operands at DWARF production stage.
Patch by Nikola Prica
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67556
There's no need to have more than one of these (there can be two
DwarfFiles - one for the .o, one for the .dwo - but only one loc/loclist
section (either in the .o or the .dwo) & certainly one per
DebugLocStream, which is currently singular in DwarfDebug)
llvm-svn: 375183
Summary:
Internally in LLVM's metadata we use DW_OP_entry_value operations with
the same semantics as DWARF; that is, its operand specifies the number
of bytes that the entry value covers.
At the time of emitting entry values we don't know the emitted size of
the DWARF expression that the entry value will cover. Currently the size
is hardcoded to 1 in DIExpression, and other values causes the verifier
to fail. As the size is 1, that effectively means that we can only have
valid entry values for registers that can be encoded in one byte, which
are the registers with DWARF numbers 0 to 31 (as they can be encoded as
single-byte DW_OP_reg0..DW_OP_reg31 rather than a multi-byte
DW_OP_regx). It is a bit confusing, but it seems like llvm-dwarfdump
will print an operation "correctly", even if the byte size is less than
that, which may make it seem that we emit correct DWARF for registers
with DWARF numbers > 31. If you instead use readelf for such cases, it
will interpret the number of specified bytes as a DWARF expression. This
seems like a limitation in llvm-dwarfdump.
As suggested in D66746, a way forward would be to add an internal
variant of DW_OP_entry_value, DW_OP_LLVM_entry_value, whose operand
instead specifies the number of operations that the entry value covers,
and we then translate that into the byte size at the time of emission.
In this patch that internal operation is added. This patch keeps the
limitation that a entry value can only be applied to simple register
locations, but it will fix the issue with the size operand being
incorrect for DWARF numbers > 31.
Reviewers: aprantl, vsk, djtodoro, NikolaPrica
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: jyknight, fedor.sergeev, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67492
llvm-svn: 374881
Summary:
DWARF's DW_OP_entry_value operation has two operands; the first is a
ULEB128 operand that specifies the size of the second operand, which is
a DWARF block. This means that we need to be able to pre-calculate and
emit the size of DWARF expressions before emitting them. There is
currently no interface for doing this in DwarfExpression, so this patch
introduces that.
When implementing this I initially thought about running through
DwarfExpression's emission two times; first with a temporary buffer to
emit the expression, in order to being able to calculate the size of
that emitted data. However, DwarfExpression is a quite complex state
machine, so I decided against that, as it seemed like the two runs could
get out of sync, resulting in incorrect size operands. Therefore I have
implemented this in a way that we only have to run DwarfExpression once.
The idea is to emit DWARF to a temporary buffer, for which it is
possible to query the size. The data in the temporary buffer can then be
emitted to DwarfExpression's main output.
In the case of DIEDwarfExpression, a temporary DIE is used. The values
are all allocated using the same BumpPtrAllocator as for all other DIEs,
and the values are then transferred to the real value list. In the case
of DebugLocDwarfExpression, the temporary buffer is implemented using a
BufferByteStreamer which emits to a buffer in the DwarfExpression
object.
Reviewers: aprantl, vsk, NikolaPrica, djtodoro
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67768
llvm-svn: 374879
Summary:
This addresses a bug in collectCallSiteParameters() where call site
immediates would be truncated from int64_t to unsigned.
This fixes PR43525.
Reviewers: djtodoro, NikolaPrica, aprantl, vsk
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68869
llvm-svn: 374770
Unify the range and loc emission (for both DWARFv4 and DWARFv5 style lists) and take advantage of that unification to use strategic base addresses for loclists.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68620
llvm-svn: 374600
Doing this makes MSVC complain that `empty(someRange)` could refer to
either C++17's std::empty or LLVM's llvm::empty, which previously we
avoided via SFINAE because std::empty is defined in terms of an empty
member rather than begin and end. So, switch callers over to the new
method as it is added.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D68439
llvm-svn: 373935
Brings this struct in line with the RangeSpan class so they might
eventually be used by common template code for generating range/loc
lists with less duplicate code.
llvm-svn: 373540
This is an effort to make RangeSpan and DebugLocStream::Entry more
similar to share code for their emission (to reuse the more complicated
code for using (& choosing when to use) base address selection entries,
etc).
It didn't seem like this struct was worth the complexity of
encapsulation - when the members could be initialized by the ctor to any
value (no validation) and the type is assignable (so there's no
mutability or other constraint being implemented by its interface).
llvm-svn: 373533
DIFlagBlockByRefStruct is an unused DIFlag that originally was used by
clang to express (Objective-)C block captures in debug info. For the
last year Clang has been emitting complex DIExpressions to describe
block captures instead, which makes all the code supporting this flag
redundant.
This patch removes the flag and all supporting "dead" code, so we can
reuse the bit for something else in the future.
Since this only affects debug info generated by Clang with the block
extension this mostly affects Apple platforms and I don't have any
bitcode compatibility concerns for removing this. The Verifier will
reject debug info that uses the bit and thus degrade gracefully when
LTO'ing older bitcode with a newer compiler.
rdar://problem/44304813
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67453
llvm-svn: 372272
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet, JDevlieghere, alexshap, rupprecht, jhenderson
Subscribers: sdardis, nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, jakehehrlich, jrtc27, MaskRay, atanasyan, jsji, seiya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67499
llvm-svn: 371742
Emit debug entry values using standard DWARF5 opcodes when the debugger
tuning is set to lldb.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67410
llvm-svn: 371666
Summary:
Add zero-materializing XORs to X86's describeLoadedValue() hook in order
to produce call site values.
I have had to change the defs logic in collectCallSiteParameters() a bit
to be able to describe the XORs. The XORs implicitly define $eflags,
which would cause them to never be considered, due to a guard condition
that I->getNumDefs() is one. I have changed that condition so that we
now only consider instructions where a forwarded register overlaps with
the instruction's single explicit define. We still need to collect the implicit
defines of other forwarded registers to remove them from the work list.
I'm not sure how to move towards supporting instructions with multiple
explicit defines, cases where forwarded register are implicitly defined,
and/or cases where an instruction produces values for multiple forwarded
registers. Perhaps the describeLoadedValue() hook should take a register
argument, and we then leave it up to the hook to describe the loaded
value in that register? I have not yet encountered a situation where
that would be necessary though.
Reviewers: aprantl, vsk, djtodoro, NikolaPrica
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: ychen, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67225
llvm-svn: 371333
Summary:
This changes the ParamLoadedValue pair which the describeLoadedValue()
hook returns so that MachineOperand objects are returned instead of
pointers.
When describing call site values we may need to describe operands which
are not part of the instruction. One such example is zero-materializing
XORs on x86, which I have implemented support for in a child revision.
Instead of having to return a pointer to an operand stored somewhere
outside the instruction, start returning objects directly instead, as
that simplifies the code.
The MachineOperand class only holds POD members, and on x86-64 it is 32
bytes large. That combined with copy elision means that the overhead of
returning a machine operand object from the hook does not become very
large.
I benchmarked this on a 8-thread i7-8650U machine with 32 GB RAM. The
benchmark consisted of building a clang 8.0 binary configured with:
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo \
-DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=X86 \
-DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER=Address \
-DCMAKE_CXX_FLAGS="-Xclang -femit-debug-entry-values -stdlib=libc++"
The average wall clock time increased by 4 seconds, from 62:05 to
62:09, which is an 0.1% increase.
Reviewers: aprantl, vsk, djtodoro, NikolaPrica
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: hiraditya, ychen, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67261
llvm-svn: 371332
Summary:
This clang-tidy check is looking for unsigned integer variables whose initializer
starts with an implicit cast from llvm::Register and changes the type of the
variable to llvm::Register (dropping the llvm:: where possible).
Partial reverts in:
X86FrameLowering.cpp - Some functions return unsigned and arguably should be MCRegister
X86FixupLEAs.cpp - Some functions return unsigned and arguably should be MCRegister
X86FrameLowering.cpp - Some functions return unsigned and arguably should be MCRegister
HexagonBitSimplify.cpp - Function takes BitTracker::RegisterRef which appears to be unsigned&
MachineVerifier.cpp - Ambiguous operator==() given MCRegister and const Register
PPCFastISel.cpp - No Register::operator-=()
PeepholeOptimizer.cpp - TargetInstrInfo::optimizeLoadInstr() takes an unsigned&
MachineTraceMetrics.cpp - MachineTraceMetrics lacks a suitable constructor
Manual fixups in:
ARMFastISel.cpp - ARMEmitLoad() now takes a Register& instead of unsigned&
HexagonSplitDouble.cpp - Ternary operator was ambiguous between unsigned/Register
HexagonConstExtenders.cpp - Has a local class named Register, used llvm::Register instead of Register.
PPCFastISel.cpp - PPCEmitLoad() now takes a Register& instead of unsigned&
Depends on D65919
Reviewers: arsenm, bogner, craig.topper, RKSimon
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: RKSimon, craig.topper, lenary, aemerson, wuzish, jholewinski, MatzeB, qcolombet, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, sbc100, jgravelle-google, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, javed.absar, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, tpr, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, Petar.Avramovic, asbirlea, Jim, s.egerton, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65962
llvm-svn: 369041
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
Summary: There are places where a case that debug label scope has an extra lexical block file is not considered properly. The modified test won't pass without this patch.
Reviewers: aprantl, HsiangKai
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66187
llvm-svn: 368891
This updates all libraries and tools in LLVM Core to use 64-bit offsets
which directly or indirectly come to DataExtractor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65638
llvm-svn: 368014
Dump the DWARF information about call sites and call site parameters into
debug info sections.
The patch also provides an interface for the interpretation of instructions
that could load values of a call site parameters in order to generate DWARF
about the call site parameters.
([13/13] Introduce the debug entry values.)
Co-authored-by: Ananth Sowda <asowda@cisco.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikola Prica <nikola.prica@rt-rk.com>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Baev <ibaev@cisco.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60716
llvm-svn: 365467
Add the IR and the AsmPrinter parts for handling of the DW_OP_entry_values
DWARF operation.
([11/13] Introduce the debug entry values.)
Co-authored-by: Ananth Sowda <asowda@cisco.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikola Prica <nikola.prica@rt-rk.com>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Baev <ibaev@cisco.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60866
llvm-svn: 364542
A unique DISubprogram may be attached to a function declaration used for
call site debug info.
([6/13] Introduce the debug entry values.)
Co-authored-by: Ananth Sowda <asowda@cisco.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikola Prica <nikola.prica@rt-rk.com>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Baev <ibaev@cisco.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60713
llvm-svn: 364500
Since the DebugLocEntry::Value is used as part of DwarfDebug and
DebugLocEntry make it as the separate class.
Reviewers: aprantl, dstenb
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63213
llvm-svn: 363246
Variable's stack location can stretch longer than it should. If a
variable is placed at the stack in a some nested basic block its range
can be calculated to be up to the next occurrence of the variable's
DBG_VALUE, or up to the end of the function, thus covering a basic
blocks that should not be included in the variable’s location range.
This happens because the DbgEntityHistoryCalculator ends register
locations at the end of a basic block only if the variable’s location
register has been changed throughout the function, which is not the
case for the register used to reference stack objects.
This patch also tries to produce a single value location if the location
list builder managed to merge all the locations into one.
Reviewers: aprantl, dstenb, jmorse
Reviewed By: aprantl, dstenb, jmorse
Subscribers: djtodoro, ivanbaev, asowda
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61600
llvm-svn: 362923
Summary:
When DwarfDebug::buildLocationList() encountered an undef debug value,
it would truncate all open values, regardless if they were overlapping or
not. This patch fixes so that it only does that for overlapping fragments.
This change unearthed a bug that I had introduced in D57511,
which I have fixed in this patch. The code in DebugHandlerBase that
changes labels for parameter debug values could break DwarfDebug's
assumption that the labels for the entries in the debug value history
are monotonically increasing. Before this patch, that bug could result
in location list entries whose ending address was lower than the
beginning address, and with the changes for undef debug values that this
patch introduces it could trigger an assertion, due to attempting to
emit location list entries with empty ranges. A reproducer for the bug
is added in param-reg-const-mix.mir.
Reviewers: aprantl, jmorse, probinson
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62379
llvm-svn: 361820
The condition !AddrPool.empty() is tested before attachRangesOrLowHighPC(), which may add an entry to AddrPool. We emit DW_AT_low_pc (DW_FORM_addrx) but may incorrectly omit DW_AT_addr_base for LineTablesOnly. This can be easily reproduced:
clang -gdwarf-5 -gmlt -c a.cc
Fix this by moving !AddrPool.empty() below.
This was discovered while investigating an lld crash (fixed by D61889) on such object files: ld.lld --gdb-index a.o
Reviewed By: probinson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61891
llvm-svn: 360678
TypedDINodeRef<T> is a redundant wrapper of Metadata * that is actually a T *.
Accordingly, change DI{Node,Scope,Type}Ref uses to DI{Node,Scope,Type} * or their const variants.
This allows us to delete many resolve() calls that clutter the code.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61369
llvm-svn: 360108
The PrologEpilogInserter need to insert a DW_OP_deref_size before
prepending a memory location expression to an already implicit
expression to avoid having the existing expression act on the memory
address instead of the value behind it.
The reason for using DW_OP_deref_size and not plain DW_OP_deref is that
big-endian targets need to read the right size as simply truncating a
larger read would yield the wrong result (LSB bytes are not at the lower
address).
This re-commit fixes issues reported in the first one. Namely deref was
inserted under wrong conditions and additionally the deref_size argument
was incorrectly encoded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59687
llvm-svn: 359535
While this doesn't come up in reasonable cases currently (the only user
defined types not in type units are ones without linkage - which makes
for near-ODR violations, because it'd be a type with linkage referencing
a type without linkage - such a type can't be validly defined in more
than one TU, so arguably it shouldn't be in a type unit to begin with -
but it's a convenient way to demonstrate an issue that will become more
revalent with homed modular debug info type definitions - which also
don't need to be in type units but more legitimately so).
Precursor to the Clang change to de-type-unit (by omitting the
'identifier') types homed due to strong linkage vtables. (making that
change without this one would lead to major type duplication in type
units)
llvm-svn: 359122
Originally committed in r358931
Reverted in r358997
Seems this change made Apple accelerator tables miss names (because
names started respecting the CU NameTableKind GNU & assuming that
shouldn't produce accelerated names too), which is never correct (apple
accelerator tables don't have separators or CU lists - if present, they
must describe all names in all CUs).
Original Description:
Currently to opt in to debug_names in DWARFv5, the IR must contain
'nameTableKind: Default' which also enables debug_pubnames.
Instead, only allow one of {debug_names, apple_names, debug_pubnames,
debug_gnu_pubnames}.
nameTableKind: Default gives debug_names in DWARFv5 and greater,
debug_pubnames in v4 and earlier - and apple_names when tuning for lldb
on MachO.
nameTableKind: GNU always gives gnu_pubnames
llvm-svn: 359026
Currently to opt in to debug_names in DWARFv5, the IR must contain
'nameTableKind: Default' which also enables debug_pubnames.
Instead, only allow one of {debug_names, apple_names, debug_pubnames,
debug_gnu_pubnames}.
nameTableKind: Default gives debug_names in DWARFv5 and greater,
debug_pubnames in v4 and earlier - and apple_names when tuning for lldb
on MachO.
nameTableKind: GNU always gives gnu_pubnames
llvm-svn: 358931
Summary:
Currently the DbgValueHistorymap only keeps track of clobbered registers
for the last debug value that it has encountered. This could lead to
preceding register-described debug values living on longer in the
location lists than they should. See PR40283 for an example. This
patch does not introduce tracking of multiple registers, but changes
the DbgValueHistoryMap structure to allow for that in a follow-up
patch. This patch is not NFC, as it at least fixes two bugs in
DwarfDebug (both are covered in the new clobbered-fragments.mir test):
* If a debug value was clobbered (its End pointer set), the value would
still be added to OpenRanges, meaning that the succeeding location list
entries could potentially contain stale values.
* If a debug value was clobbered, and there were non-overlapping
fragments that were still live after the clobbering, DwarfDebug would
not create a location list entry starting directly after the
clobbering instruction. This meant that the location list could have
a gap until the next debug value for the variable was encountered.
Before this patch, the history map was represented by <Begin, End>
pairs, where a new pair was created for each new debug value. When
dealing with partially overlapping register-described debug values, such
as in the following example:
DBG_VALUE $reg2, $noreg, !1, !DIExpression(DW_OP_LLVM_fragment, 32, 32)
[...]
DBG_VALUE $reg3, $noreg, !1, !DIExpression(DW_OP_LLVM_fragment, 64, 32)
[...]
$reg2 = insn1
[...]
$reg3 = insn2
the history map would then contain the entries `[<DV1, insn1>, [<DV2, insn2>]`.
This would leave it up to the users of the map to be aware of
the relative order of the instructions, which e.g. could make
DwarfDebug::buildLocationList() needlessly complex. Instead, this patch
makes the history map structure monotonically increasing by dropping the
End pointer, and replacing that with explicit clobbering entries in the
vector. Each debug value has an "end index", which if set, points to the
entry in the vector that ends the debug value. The ending entry can
either be an overlapping debug value, or an instruction which clobbers
the register that the debug value is described by. The ending entry's
instruction can thus either be excluded or included in the debug value's
range. If the end index is not set, the debug value that the entry
introduces is valid until the end of the function.
Changes to test cases:
* DebugInfo/X86/pieces-3.ll: The range of the first DBG_VALUE, which
describes that the fragment (0, 64) is located in RDI, was
incorrectly ended by the clobbering of RAX, which the second
(non-overlapping) DBG_VALUE was described by. With this patch we
get a second entry that only describes RDI after that clobbering.
* DebugInfo/ARM/partial-subreg.ll: This test seems to indiciate a bug
in LiveDebugValues that is caused by it not being aware of fragments.
I have added some comments in the test case about that. Also, before
this patch DwarfDebug would incorrectly include a register-described
debug value from a preceding block in a location list entry.
Reviewers: aprantl, probinson, dblaikie, rnk, bjope
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59941
llvm-svn: 358072
Summary:
In an upcoming commit the history map will be changed so that it
contains explicit entries for instructions that clobber preceding debug
values, rather than Begin- End range pairs, so generalize the name to
"Entry".
Also, prefix the iterator variable names in buildLocationList() with
"E". In an upcoming commit the entry will have query functions such as
"isD(e)b(u)gValue", which could at a glance make one confuse it for
iterations over MachineInstrs, so make the iterator names a bit more
distinct to avoid that.
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59939
llvm-svn: 358060
Summary:
Replace use of std::pair by creating a class for the debug value
instruction ranges instead. This is a preparatory refactoring for
improving handling of clobbered fragments.
In an upcoming commit the Begin pointer will become a PointerIntPair, so
it will be cleaner to have a getter for that.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59938
llvm-svn: 358059
Summary:
With MergeValues() removed, amend DebugLocEntry's constructor so that it
takes multiple values rather than a single, and keep non-fragment values
in OpenRanges, as this allows some cleanup of the code in
buildLocationList().
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, loladiro
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59303
llvm-svn: 357988
Summary:
The MergeValues() function would try to merge two entries if they shared
the same beginning label. Having the same beginning label means that the
former entry's range would be empty; however, after D55919 we no longer
create entries for empty ranges, so we can no longer land in a situation
where that check in MergeValues would succeed. Instead, the "merging" is
done by keeping the live values from the preceding empty ranges in
OpenRanges, and adding them to the first non-empty range.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, loladiro
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59301
llvm-svn: 357974
This reverts commit rL357020.
The commit broke the test llvm/test/tools/llvm-objdump/embedded-source.test
on some builds including clang-ppc64be-linux-multistage,
clang-s390x-linux, clang-with-lto-ubuntu, clang-x64-windows-msvc,
llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-windows10pro-fast (and others).
llvm-svn: 357026
Reapply rL356941 after regenerating the object file in the failing test
llvm/test/tools/llvm-objdump/embedded-source.test from source.
Original commit message:
[llvm] Prevent duplicate files in debug line header in dwarf 5.
Motivation: In previous dwarf versions, file name indexes started from 1, and
the primary source file was not explicit. Dwarf 5 standard (6.2.4) prescribes
the primary source file to be explicitly given an entry with an index number 0.
The current implementation honors the specification by just duplicating the
main source file, once with index number 0, and later maybe with another
index number. While this is compliant with the letter of the standard, the
duplication causes problems for consumers of this information such as lldb.
(Some files are duplicated, where only some of them have a line table although
all refer to the same file)
With this change, dwarf 5 debug line section files always start from 0, and
the zeroth entry is not duplicated whenever possible. This requires different
handling of dwarf 4 and dwarf 5 during generation (e.g. when a function returns
an index zero for a file name, it signals an error in dwarf 4, but not in dwarf 5)
However, I think the minor complication is worth it, because it enables all
consumers (lldb, gdb, dwarfdump, objdump, and so on) to treat all files in the
file name list homogenously.
Tags: #llvm, #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59515
llvm-svn: 357018
Summary:
Motivation: In previous dwarf versions, file name indexes started from 1, and
the primary source file was not explicit. Dwarf 5 standard (6.2.4) prescribes
the primary source file to be explicitly given an entry with an index number 0.
The current implementation honors the specification by just duplicating the
main source file, once with index number 0, and later maybe with another
index number. While this is compliant with the letter of the standard, the
duplication causes problems for consumers of this information such as lldb.
(Some files are duplicated, where only some of them have a line table although
all refer to the same file)
With this change, dwarf 5 debug line section files always start from 0, and
the zeroth entry is not duplicated whenever possible. This requires different
handling of dwarf 4 and dwarf 5 during generation (e.g. when a function returns
an index zero for a file name, it signals an error in dwarf 4, but not in dwarf 5)
However, I think the minor complication is worth it, because it enables all
consumers (lldb, gdb, dwarfdump, objdump, and so on) to treat all files in the
file name list homogenously.
Reviewers: dblaikie, probinson, aprantl, espindola
Reviewed By: probinson
Subscribers: emaste, jvesely, nhaehnle, aprantl, javed.absar, arichardson, hiraditya, MaskRay, rupprecht, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59515
llvm-svn: 356941
Nothing prevents entries from being bigger than the 16 bit size field in
Dwarf < 5. For entries that are too big, just emit an empty entry
instead of crashing.
This fixes PR41038.
Reviewers: probinson, aprantl, davide
Reviewed By: probinson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59518
llvm-svn: 356514
Introduce a DW_OP_LLVM_convert Dwarf expression pseudo op that allows
for a convenient way to perform type conversions on the Dwarf expression
stack. As an additional bonus it paves the way for using other Dwarf
v5 ops that need to reference a base_type.
The new DW_OP_LLVM_convert is used from lib/Transforms/Utils/Local.cpp
to perform sext/zext on debug values but mainly the patch is about
preparing terrain for adding other Dwarf v5 ops that need to reference a
base_type.
For Dwarf v5 the op maps to DW_OP_convert and for earlier versions a
complex shift & mask pattern is generated to emulate sext/zext.
This is a recommit of r356442 with trivial fixes for the failing tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56587
llvm-svn: 356451
Introduce a DW_OP_LLVM_convert Dwarf expression pseudo op that allows
for a convenient way to perform type conversions on the Dwarf expression
stack. As an additional bonus it paves the way for using other Dwarf
v5 ops that need to reference a base_type.
The new DW_OP_LLVM_convert is used from lib/Transforms/Utils/Local.cpp
to perform sext/zext on debug values but mainly the patch is about
preparing terrain for adding other Dwarf v5 ops that need to reference a
base_type.
For Dwarf v5 the op maps to DW_OP_convert and for earlier versions a
complex shift & mask pattern is generated to emulate sext/zext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56587
llvm-svn: 356442
This configuration (due to r349207) was intended not to emit any DWO CU,
but a degenerate CU was still being emitted - containing a header and a
DW_TAG_compile_unit with no attributes.
Under that situation, emit nothing to the .dwo file. (since this is a
dynamic property of the input the .dwo file is still emitted, just with
nothing in it (so a valid, but empty, ELF file) - if some other CU
didn't satisfy this criteria, its DWO CU would still go there, etc)
llvm-svn: 353771
Summary: Initial function labels must follow the debug location for the correct relocation info generation.
Reviewers: tra, jlebar, echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45784
llvm-svn: 351843
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
Currently we do not always collapse subsequent .loc 0 0 directives. The
reason is that we were checking for a PrevInstLoc which is not set when
we emit a line-0 record. We should only check the LastAsmLine, which
seems to be created exactly for this purpose.
// When we emit a line-0 record, we don't update PrevInstLoc; so look at
// the last line number actually emitted, to see if it was line 0.
unsigned LastAsmLine =
Asm->OutStreamer->getContext().getCurrentDwarfLoc().getLine();
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56767
llvm-svn: 351395
Summary:
This fixes PR39710. In that case we emitted a location list looking like
this:
.Ldebug_loc0:
.quad .Lfunc_begin0-.Lfunc_begin0
.quad .Lfunc_begin0-.Lfunc_begin0
.short 1 # Loc expr size
.byte 85 # DW_OP_reg5
.quad .Lfunc_begin0-.Lfunc_begin0
.quad .Lfunc_end0-.Lfunc_begin0
.short 1 # Loc expr size
.byte 85 # super-register DW_OP_reg5
.quad 0
.quad 0
As seen, the first entry's beginning and ending addresses evalute to 0,
which meant that the entry inadvertently became an "end of list" entry,
resulting in the location list ending sooner than expected.
To fix this, omit all entries with empty ranges. Location list entries
with empty ranges do not have any effect, as specified by DWARF, so we
might as well drop them:
"A location list entry (but not a base address selection or end of list
entry) whose beginning and ending addresses are equal has no effect
because the size of the range covered by such an entry is zero."
Reviewers: davide, aprantl, dblaikie
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: javed.absar, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55919
llvm-svn: 350698
When deciding lazily whether a CU would be split or non-split I
accidentally dropped some handling for the line tables comp_dir (by
doing it lazily it was too late to be handled properly by the MC line
table code).
Move that bit of the code back to the non-lazy place.
llvm-svn: 349819
In ThinLTO many split CUs may be effectively empty because of the lack
of support for cross-unit references in split DWARF.
Using a split unit in those cases is just a waste/overhead - and turned
out to be one contributor to a significant symbolizer performance issue
when global variable debug info was being imported (see r348416 for the
primary fix) due to symbolizers seeing CUs with no ranges, assuming
there might still be addresses covered and walking into the split CU to
see if there are any ranges (when that split CU was in a DWP file, that
meant loading the DWP and its index, the index was extra large because
of all these fractured/empty CUs... and so was very expensive to load).
(the 3rd fix which will follow, is to assume that a CU with no ranges is
empty rather than merely missing its CU level range data - and to not
walk into its DIEs (split or otherwise) in search of address information
that is generally not present)
llvm-svn: 349207
Summary:
The comment refers to the field as "Kind:". However, in gdb,
https://sourceware.org/gdb//onlinedocs/gdb/Index-Section-Format.html names it "attributes",
gdb/dwarf2read.c:dw2_symtab_iter_next refers to the whole value as "cu_index_and_attrs"
Change it to `Attributes:` for consistency.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, arphaman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54480
llvm-svn: 346790
Summary:
Ranges base address specifiers can save a lot of object size in
relocation records especially in optimized builds.
For an optimized self-host build of Clang with split DWARF and debug
info compression in object files, but uncompressed debug info in the
executable, this change produces about 18% smaller object files and 6%
larger executable.
While it would've been nice to turn this on by default, gold's 32 bit
gdb-index support crashes on this input & I don't think there's any
perfect heuristic to implement solely in LLVM that would suffice - so
we'll need a flag one way or another (also possible people might want to
aggressively optimized for executable size that contains debug info
(even with compression this would still come at some cost to executable
size)) - so let's plumb it through.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54242
llvm-svn: 346788
Turns out knowing more than just the base address might be useful -
specifically a future change to respect a DICompileUnit flag for the use
of base address specifiers in DWARF < 5.
llvm-svn: 346380
Before this patch DbgInfoAvailable was set to true in
DwarfDebug::beginModule() or CodeViewDebug::CodeViewDebug(). This made
MIR testing weird since passes would suddenly stop dealing with debug
info just because we stopped the pipeline before the debug printers.
This patch changes the logic to initialize DbgInfoAvailable based on the
fact that debug_compile_units exist in the llvm Module. The debug
printers may then override it with false in case of debug printing being
disabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53885
llvm-svn: 345740
.debug_loclists is the DWARF 5 version of the .debug_loc.
With that patch, it will be emitted when DWARF 5 is used.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53365
llvm-svn: 345377
This isn't the most object-size efficient encoding, but it's the only
one GDB supports for the pre-standard fission format. I've written fixes
for this twice now... - so perhaps this comment will help me remember
why neither of these have been committed and why I shouldn't try to
write a third fix another year from now...
llvm-svn: 345326
This makes the offsets larger (since they are further from the base
address) but those are in the .dwo - and allows removing addresses and
relocations from the .o file.
This could be built into the AddressPool more fundamentally, perhaps -
when you ask for an AddressPool entry you could say "or give me some
other entry and an offset I need to use" - though what to do about
situations where the first use of an address in a section is not the
earliest address in that section... is tricky.
At least with range addresses we can be fairly sure we've seen the
earliest address first because we see the start address for the
function.
llvm-svn: 345224
Logs provided by @stella.stamenova indicate that on Linux, lldb adds a
spurious slide offset to the return PC it loads from AT_call_return_pc
attributes (see the list thread: "[PATCH] D50478: Add support for
artificial tail call frames").
This patch side-steps the issue by getting rid of the load address
calculation in lldb's CallEdge::GetReturnPCAddress.
The idea is to have the DWARF writer emit function-local offsets to the
instruction after a call. I.e. return-pc = label-after-call-insn -
function-entry. LLDB can simply add this offset to the base address of a
function to get the return PC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53469
llvm-svn: 344960
Using a base address specifier even for a single-element range is a size
win for object files (7 words versus 8 words - more significant savings
if the debug info is compressed (since it's 3 words of uncompressable
reloc + 4 compressable words compared to 6 uncompressable reloc + 2
compressable words) - does trade off executable size increase though.
llvm-svn: 344841
Putting addresses in the address pool, even with non-fission, can reduce
relocations - reusing the addresses from debug_info and debug_rnglists
(the latter coming soon)
llvm-svn: 344834
The initial patch was not reviewed, and does not have any tests;
it should not have been merged.
This reverts 344395, 344390, 344387, 344385, 344381, 344376,
and 344366.
llvm-svn: 344405
BTF is the debug format for BPF, a kernel virtual machine
and widely used for tracing, networking and security, etc ([1]).
Currently only instruction streams are passed to kernel,
the kernel verifier verifies them before execution. In order to
provide better visibility of bpf programs to user space
tools, some debug information, e.g., function names and
debug line information are desirable for kernel so tools
can get such information with better annotation
for jited instructions for performance or other reasons.
The dwarf is too complicated in kernel and for BPF.
Hence, BTF is designed to be the debug format for BPF ([2]).
Right now, pahole supports BTF for types, which
are generated based on dwarf sections in the ELF file.
In order to annotate performance metrics for jited bpf insns,
it is necessary to pass debug line info to the kernel.
Furthermore, we want to pass the actual code to the
kernel because of the following reasons:
. bpf program typically is small so storage overhead
should be small.
. in bpf land, it is totally possible that
an application loads the bpf program into the
kernel and then that application quits, so
holding debug info by the user space application
is not practical.
. having source codes directly kept by kernel
would ease deployment since the original source
code does not need ship on every hosts and
kernel-devel package does not need to be
deployed even if kernel headers are used.
The only reliable time to get the source code is
during compilation time. This will result in both more
accurate information and easier deployment as
stated in the above.
Another consideration is for JIT. The project like bcc
use MCJIT to compile a C program into bpf insns and
load them to the kernel ([3]). The generated BTF sections
will be readily available for such cases as well.
This patch implemented generation of BTF info in llvm
compiler. The BTF related sections will be generated
when both -target bpf and -g are specified. Two sections
are generated:
.BTF contains all the type and string information, and
.BTF.ext contains the func_info and line_info.
The separation is related to how two sections are used
differently in bpf loader, e.g., linux libbpf ([4]).
The .BTF section can be loaded into the kernel directly
while .BTF.ext needs loader manipulation before loading
to the kernel. The format of the each section is roughly
defined in llvm:include/llvm/MC/MCBTFContext.h and
from the implementation in llvm:lib/MC/MCBTFContext.cpp.
A later example also shows the contents in each section.
The type and func_info are gathered during CodeGen/AsmPrinter
by traversing dwarf debug_info. The line_info is
gathered in MCObjectStreamer before writing to
the object file. After all the information is gathered,
the two sections are emitted in MCObjectStreamer::finishImpl.
With cmake CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug, the compiler can
dump out all the tables except insn offset, which
will be resolved later as relocation records.
The debug type "btf" is used for BTFContext dump.
Dwarf tests the debug info generation with
llvm-dwarfdump to decode the binary sections and
check whether the result is expected. Currently
we do not have such a tool yet. We will implement
btf dump functionality in bpftool ([5]) as the bpftool is
considered the recommended tool for bpf introspection.
The implementation for type and func_info is tested
with linux kernel test cases. The line_info is visually
checked with dump from linux kernel libbpf ([4]) and
checked with readelf dumping section raw data.
Note that the .BTF and .BTF.ext information will not
be emitted to assembly code and there is no assembler
support for BTF either.
In the below, with a clang/llvm built with CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug,
Each table contents are shown for a simple C program.
-bash-4.2$ cat -n test.c
1 struct A {
2 int a;
3 char b;
4 };
5
6 int test(struct A *t) {
7 return t->a;
8 }
-bash-4.2$ clang -O2 -target bpf -g -mllvm -debug-only=btf -c test.c
Type Table:
[1] FUNC name_off=1 info=0x0c000001 size/type=2
param_type=3
[2] INT name_off=12 info=0x01000000 size/type=4
desc=0x01000020
[3] PTR name_off=0 info=0x02000000 size/type=4
[4] STRUCT name_off=16 info=0x04000002 size/type=8
name_off=18 type=2 bit_offset=0
name_off=20 type=5 bit_offset=32
[5] INT name_off=22 info=0x01000000 size/type=1
desc=0x02000008
String Table:
0 :
1 : test
6 : .text
12 : int
16 : A
18 : a
20 : b
22 : char
27 : test.c
34 : int test(struct A *t) {
58 : return t->a;
FuncInfo Table:
sec_name_off=6
insn_offset=<Omitted> type_id=1
LineInfo Table:
sec_name_off=6
insn_offset=<Omitted> file_name_off=27 line_off=34 line_num=6 column_num=0
insn_offset=<Omitted> file_name_off=27 line_off=58 line_num=7 column_num=3
-bash-4.2$ readelf -S test.o
......
[12] .BTF PROGBITS 0000000000000000 0000028d
00000000000000c1 0000000000000000 0 0 1
[13] .BTF.ext PROGBITS 0000000000000000 0000034e
0000000000000050 0000000000000000 0 0 1
[14] .rel.BTF.ext REL 0000000000000000 00000648
0000000000000030 0000000000000010 16 13 8
......
-bash-4.2$
The latest linux kernel ([6]) can already support .BTF with type information.
The [7] has the reference implementation in linux kernel side
to support .BTF.ext func_info. The .BTF.ext line_info support is not
implemented yet. If you have difficulty accessing [6], you can
manually do the following to access the code:
git clone https://github.com/yonghong-song/bpf-next-linux.git
cd bpf-next-linux
git checkout btf
The change will push to linux kernel soon once this patch is landed.
References:
[1]. https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/filter.txt
[2]. https://lwn.net/Articles/750695/
[3]. https://github.com/iovisor/bcc
[4]. https://github.com/torvalds/linux/tree/master/tools/lib/bpf
[5]. https://github.com/torvalds/linux/tree/master/tools/bpf/bpftool
[6]. https://github.com/torvalds/linux
[7]. https://github.com/yonghong-song/bpf-next-linux/tree/btf
Signed-off-by: Song Liu <songliubraving@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Acked-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52950
llvm-svn: 344366
It originally triggered a stepping problem in the debugger, which could
be fixed by adjusting CodeGen/LexicalScopes.cpp however it seems we prefer
the previous behavior anyway.
See the discussion for details: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20181008/593833.html
This reverts commit r343880.
This reverts commit r343874.
llvm-svn: 344318
DWARF v5 introduces DW_AT_call_all_calls, a subprogram attribute which
indicates that all calls (both regular and tail) within the subprogram
have call site entries. The information within these call site entries
can be used by a debugger to populate backtraces with synthetic tail
call frames.
Tail calling frames go missing in backtraces because the frame of the
caller is reused by the callee. Call site entries allow a debugger to
reconstruct a sequence of (tail) calls which led from one function to
another. This improves backtrace quality. There are limitations: tail
recursion isn't handled, variables within synthetic frames may not
survive to be inspected, etc. This approach is not novel, see:
https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/summit2010?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=jelinek.pdf
This patch adds an IR-level flag (DIFlagAllCallsDescribed) which lowers
to DW_AT_call_all_calls. It adds the minimal amount of DWARF generation
support needed to emit standards-compliant call site entries. For easier
deployment, when the debugger tuning is LLDB, the DWARF requirement is
adjusted to v4.
Testing: Apart from check-{llvm, clang}, I built a stage2 RelWithDebInfo
clang binary. Its dSYM passed verification and grew by 1.4% compared to
the baseline. 151,879 call site entries were added.
rdar://42001377
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49887
llvm-svn: 343883
Context: Compiler generated instructions do not have a debug location
assigned to them. However emitting 0-line records for all of them bloats
the line tables for very little benefit so we usually avoid doing that.
Not emitting anything will lead to the previous debug location getting
applied to the locationless instructions. This is not desirable for
block begin and after labels. Previously we would emit simply emit
line-0 records in this case, this patch changes the behavior to do a
forward search for a debug location in these cases before emitting a
line-0 record to further reduce line table bloat.
Inspired by the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D52862
llvm-svn: 343874
Currently, we emit DW_AT_addr_base that points to the beginning of
the .debug_addr section. That is not correct for the DWARF5 case because address
table contains the header and the attribute should point to the first entry
following the header.
This is currently the reason why LLDB does not work with such executables correctly.
Patch fixes the issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52168
llvm-svn: 342635
std::vector::iterator type may be a pointer, then
iterator::value_type fails to compile since iterator is not a class,
namespace, or enumeration.
Patch by orivej (Orivej Desh)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52142
llvm-svn: 342354
In DwarfDebug::collectEntityInfo(), if the label entity is processed in
DbgLabels list, it means the label is not optimized out. There is no
need to generate debug info for it with null position.
llvm-svn: 341513
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 340039
In cases where the debugger load time is a worthwhile tradeoff (or less
costly - such as loading from a DWP instead of a variety of DWOs
(possibly over a high-latency/distributed filesystem)) against object
file size, it can be reasonable to disable pubnames and corresponding
gdb-index creation in the linker.
A backend-flag version of this was implemented for NVPTX in
D44385/r327994 - which was fine for NVPTX which wouldn't mix-and-match
CUs. Now that it's going to be a user-facing option (likely powered by
"-gno-pubnames", the same as GCC) it should be encoded in the
DICompileUnit so it can vary per-CU.
After this, likely the NVPTX support should be migrated to the metadata
& the previous flag implementation should be removed.
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50213
llvm-svn: 339939
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 339676
When using APPLE extensions, don't duplicate the compiler invocation's
flags both in AT_producer and AT_APPLE_flags.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50453
llvm-svn: 339268
Summary:
The accelerator tables use the debug_str section to store their strings.
However, they do not support the indirect method of access that is
available for the debug_info section (DW_FORM_strx et al.).
Currently our code is assuming that all strings can/will be referenced
indirectly, and puts all of them into the debug_str_offsets section.
This is generally true for regular (unsplit) dwarf, but in the DWO case,
most of the strings in the debug_str section will only be used from the
accelerator tables. Therefore the contents of the debug_str_offsets
section will be largely unused and bloating the main executable.
This patch rectifies this by teaching the DwarfStringPool to
differentiate between strings accessed directly and indirectly. When a
user inserts a string into the pool it has to declare whether that
string will be referenced directly or not. If at least one user requsts
indirect access, that string will be assigned an index ID and put into
debug_str_offsets table. Otherwise, the offset table is skipped.
This approach reduces the overall binary size (when compiled with
-gdwarf-5 -gsplit-dwarf) in my tests by about 2% (debug_str_offsets is
shrunk by 99%).
Reviewers: probinson, dblaikie, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49493
llvm-svn: 339122
Summary:
Added an option that allows to emit only '.loc' and '.file' kind debug
directives, but disables emission of the DWARF sections. Required for
NVPTX target to support profiling. It requires '.loc' and '.file'
directives, but does not require any DWARF sections for the profiler.
Reviewers: probinson, echristo, dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46021
llvm-svn: 338616
Getting the DWARF types section is only implemented for ELF object
files. We already disabled emitting debug types in clang (r337717), but
now we also report an fatal error (rather than crashing) when trying to
obtain this section in MC. Additionally we ignore the generate debug
types flag for unsupported target triples.
See PR38190 for more information.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50057
llvm-svn: 338527
This revision implements support for generating DWARFv5 .debug_addr section.
The implementation is pretty straight-forward: we just check the dwarf version
and emit section header if needed.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Reviewed by: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50005
llvm-svn: 338487
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 338390
The test failure was caused by the compiler not emitting a __debug_ranges section with DWARF 4 and
earlier when no ranges are needed. The test checks for the existence regardless.
llvm-svn: 338081
Previous version of this patch failed on darwin targets because of
different handling of cross-debug-section relocations. This fixes the
tests to emit the DW_AT_str_offsets_base attribute correctly in both
cases. Since doing this is a non-trivial amount of code, and I'm going
to need it in more than one test, I've added a helper function to the
dwarfgen DIE class to do it.
Original commit message follows:
The motivation for this is D49493, where we'd like to test details of
debug_str_offsets behavior which is difficult to trigger from a
traditional test.
This adds the plubming necessary for dwarfgen to generate this section.
The more interesting changes are:
- I've moved emitStringOffsetsTableHeader function from DwarfFile to
DwarfStringPool, so I can generate the section header more easily from
the unit test.
- added a new addAttribute overload taking an MCExpr*. This is used to
generate the DW_AT_str_offsets_base, which links a compile unit to the
offset table.
I've also added a basic test for reading and writing DW_form_strx forms.
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49670
llvm-svn: 338031
This recommits r337910 after fixing an "ambiguous call to addAttribute"
error with some compilers (gcc circa 4.9 and MSVC). It seems that these
compilers will consider a "false -> pointer" conversion during overload
resolution. This creates ambiguity because one I added an overload which
takes a MCExpr * as an argument.
I fix this by making the new overload take MCExpr&, which avoids the
conversion. It also documents the fact that we expect a valid MCExpr
object.
Original commit message follows:
The motivation for this is D49493, where we'd like to test details of
debug_str_offsets behavior which is difficult to trigger from a
traditional test.
This adds the plubming necessary for dwarfgen to generate this section.
The more interesting changes are:
- I've moved emitStringOffsetsTableHeader function from DwarfFile to
DwarfStringPool, so I can generate the section header more easily from
the unit test.
- added a new addAttribute overload taking an MCExpr*. This is used to
generate the DW_AT_str_offsets_base, which links a compile unit to the
offset table.
I've also added a basic test for reading and writing DW_form_strx forms.
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49670
llvm-svn: 337933
This reverts commit r337910 as it's generating "ambiguous call to
addAttribute" errors on some bots.
Will resubmit once I get a chance to look into the problem.
llvm-svn: 337924
Summary:
The motivation for this is D49493, where we'd like to test details of
debug_str_offsets behavior which is difficult to trigger from a
traditional test.
This adds the plubming necessary for dwarfgen to generate this section.
The more interesting changes are:
- I've moved emitStringOffsetsTableHeader function from DwarfFile to
DwarfStringPool, so I can generate the section header more easily from
the unit test.
- added a new addAttribute overload taking an MCExpr*. This is used to
generate the DW_AT_str_offsets_base, which links a compile unit to the
offset table.
I've also added a basic test for reading and writing DW_form_strx forms.
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49670
llvm-svn: 337910
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 337799
Summary:
Each of the four methods had a dozen lines and was doing almost exactly
the same thing: get the appropriate accelerator table kind and insert an
entry into it. I move this common logic to a helper function and make
these methods delegate to it.
This came up in the context of D49493, where I've needed to make adding
a string to a string pool slightly more complicated, and it seemed to
make sense to do it in one place instead of five.
To make this work I've needed to unify the interface of the AccelTable
data types, as some used to store DIE& and others DIE*. I chose to unify
to a reference as that's what the caller uses.
This technically isn't NFC, because it changes the StringPool used for
apple tables in the DWO case (now it uses the main file like DWARF v5
instead of the DWO file). However, that shouldn't matter, as DWO is not
a thing on apple targets (clang frontend simply ignores -gsplit-dwarf).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49542
llvm-svn: 337562
Summary:
This patch makes us generate the debug_names section in response to some
user-facing commands (previously it was only generated if explicitly
selected via the -accel-tables option).
My goal was to make this work for DWARF>=5 (as it's an official part of
that standard), and also, as an extension, for DWARF<5 if one is
explicitly tuning for lldb as a debugger (because it brings a large
performance improvement there).
This is slightly complicated by the fact that the debug_names tables are
incompatible with the DWARF v4 type units (they assume that the type
units are in the debug_info section), and unfortunately, right now we
generate DWARF v4-style type units even for -gdwarf-5. For this reason,
I disable all accelerator tables if the user requested type unit
generation. I do this even for apple tables, as they have the same
problem (in fact generating type units for apple targets makes us crash
even before we get around to emitting the accelerator tables).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie, echristo, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49420
llvm-svn: 337544
Since DWARFv5 rnglists are self descriptive and have distinct encodings
for base-relative (offset_pair) and absolute (start_length) entries,
there's no need to use a base address specifier when describing a lone
address range in a section.
Use that, and improve the test coverage a bit here to include cases like
this and others.
llvm-svn: 337411
and no use of DW_FORM_rnglistx with the DW_AT_ranges attribute.
Reviewer: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49214
llvm-svn: 336927
This is prep for DWARF v5 range list emission. Emission of a single range list is moved
to a static helper function.
Reviewer: jdevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49098
llvm-svn: 336621
Summary:
.debug_loc section is not supported for NVPTX target. If there is an
object whose location can change during its lifetime, we do not generate
debug location info for this variable.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48730
llvm-svn: 335976
Remove unused ByteStreamer argument from function emitDebugLocValue.
Patch by Nikola Prica.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48590
llvm-svn: 335811
In DWARF v5, the DWO ID is in the (split/skeleton) CU header, not an
attribute on the CU DIE.
This changes the size of those headers, so use the parsed size whenever
we have one, for simplicitly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47158
llvm-svn: 333004
This reapplies commits: r330271, r330592, r330779.
[DEBUG] Initial adaptation of NVPTX target for debug info emission.
Summary:
Patch adds initial emission of the debug info for NVPTX target.
Currently, only .file and .loc directives are emitted, everything else is
commented out to not break the compilation of Cuda.
llvm-svn: 332689
Summary:
If we are not emitting a linkage name in the .debug_info sections, we
should not add it into the index either. This makes sure our index is
consistent with the actual debug info.
I am also explicitly setting the --dwarf-linkage-names=All in the
name-collsions test as that one would now fail on targets where this
defaults to "Abstract" (in fact, it would have failed already if there
wasn't a bug in the DWARF verifier, which I fix as well).
Reviewers: probinson, aprantl, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46748
llvm-svn: 332246
The DEBUG() macro is very generic so it might clash with other projects.
The renaming was done as follows:
- git grep -l 'DEBUG' | xargs sed -i 's/\bDEBUG\s\?(/LLVM_DEBUG(/g'
- git diff -U0 master | ../clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py -i -p1 -style LLVM
- Manual change to APInt
- Manually chage DOCS as regex doesn't match it.
In the transition period the DEBUG() macro is still present and aliased
to the LLVM_DEBUG() one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43624
llvm-svn: 332240
In order to set breakpoints on labels and list source code around
labels, we need collect debug information for labels, i.e., label
name, the function label belong, line number in the file, and the
address label located. In order to keep these information in LLVM
IR and to allow backend to generate debug information correctly.
We create a new kind of metadata for labels, DILabel. The format
of DILabel is
!DILabel(scope: !1, name: "foo", file: !2, line: 3)
We hope to keep debug information as much as possible even the
code is optimized. So, we create a new kind of intrinsic for label
metadata to avoid the metadata is eliminated with basic block.
The intrinsic will keep existing if we keep it from optimized out.
The format of the intrinsic is
llvm.dbg.label(metadata !1)
It has only one argument, that is the DILabel metadata. The
intrinsic will follow the label immediately. Backend could get the
label metadata through the intrinsic's parameter.
We also create DIBuilder API for labels to be used by Frontend.
Frontend could use createLabel() to allocate DILabel objects, and use
insertLabel() to insert llvm.dbg.label intrinsic in LLVM IR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45024
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 331841
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
This appears to have some issues associated with the file directive output
causing multiple global symbols with the name "file" to be emitted into a
startup section. I'm investigating more specific causes and working with the
original author.
This reverts commit r330271.
Also Revert "[DEBUGINFO, NVPTX] Add the test for the debug info of the local"
This reverts commit r330592 and the follow up of 330779 as the testcase is dependent upon r330271.
llvm-svn: 331237
Summary:
Patch adds initial emission of the debug info for NVPTX target.
Currently, only .file and .loc directives are emitted, everything else is
commented out to not break the compilation of Cuda.
Reviewers: echristo, jlebar, tra, jholewinski
Subscribers: mgorny, aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41827
llvm-svn: 330271
Summary:
Previously we crashed for the combination of the two features because we
tried to reference the dwo CU from the main object file. The fix
consists of two items:
- reference the skeleton CU from the name index (the consumer is
expected to use the skeleton CU to find the real data).
- use the main object file string pool for the strings in the index
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45566
llvm-svn: 330249
Summary:
If an input DICompileUnit is completely empty (e.g., the result of
running "clang -g" on an empty file), we don't bother emitting an empty
DWARF CU. When we do that, we must make sure we don't also emit a DWARF v5
name index, as DWARF specifies that each index must reference at least
one compilation unit.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45435
llvm-svn: 329575
Summary:
We were emitting accelerator entries for functions with no name, which
is contrary to the DWARF v5 spec: "All other (i.e., *not*
DW_TAG_namespace) debugging information entries without a DW_AT_name
attribute are excluded." Besides that, a name table entry with an empty
string as a key is fairly useless.
We can sometimes end up with functions which have a DW_AT_linkage_name but no
DW_AT_name. One such example is the global-constructor-initialization functions,
which C++ compilers synthesize for each compilation unit with global
constructors.
A very strict reading of the DWARF v5 spec would suggest that we should not even
emit the accelerator entry for the linkage name in this case, but I don't think
we should go that far.
I found this when running the dwarf verifier over llvm codebase compiled
with DWARF v5 accelerator tables.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: vleschuk, clayborg, echristo, probinson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45367
llvm-svn: 329552
Summary:
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before sorting.
This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined sorting
order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to llvm::sort.
Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the required patches.
Reviewers: bogner, rnk, MatzeB, RKSimon
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45133
llvm-svn: 329435
Some compilers do not like having an enum type and a variable with the
same name (AccelTableKind). I rename the variable to TheAccelTableKind.
Suggestions for a better name welcome.
llvm-svn: 329202