Allow variable number of directories, as allowed by the
specification. NumberOfRvaAndSize will default to 16 if not specified,
as in the past.
Reviewed by: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108825
Summary: This patch is trying to add support for llvm-readobj
--needed-libs option under XCOFF.
For XCOFF, the needed libraries can be found from the Import
File ID Name Table of the Loader Section.
Currently, I am using binary inputs in the test since yaml2obj
does not yet support for writing the Loader Section and the
import file table.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106643
Support XCOFFDumper relocation reading support
This patch is part of D103696 partition
Reviewed By: daltenty, Helflym
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104646
The current implementation of printAttributes makes it fiddly to extend
attribute support for new targets.
By refactoring the code so all target specific variables are
initialized in a switch/case statement, it becomes simpler to extend
attribute support for new targets.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107968
The new ELF notes are added in clang-offload-wrapper, and llvm-readobj has to visualize them properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99552
item of StringTable.
Summary: For the string table in XCOFF, the first 4 bytes
contains the length of the string table, so we should
print the string entries from fifth bytes. This patch
also adds tests for llvm-readobj dumping the string
table.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105522
When we build with split dwarf in single mode the .o files that contain both "normal" debug sections and dwo sections, along with relocaiton sections for "normal" debug sections.
When we create DWARF context in DWARFObjInMemory we process relocations and store them in the map for .debug_info, etc section.
For DWO Context we also do it for non dwo dwarf sections. Which I believe is not necessary. This leads to a lot of memory being wasted. We observed 70GB extra memory being used.
I went with context sensitive approach, flag is passed in. I am not sure if it's always safe not to process relocations for regular debug sections if Obj contains .dwo sections.
If it is alternatvie might be just to scan, in constructor, sections and if there are .dwo sections not to process regular debug ones.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106624
[[noreturn]] can be used since Oct 2016 when the minimum compiler requirement was bumped to GCC 4.8/MSVC 2015.
Note: the definition of LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN is kept for now.
The current implementation of displaying .stack_size information
presumes that each entry represents a single function but this is not
always the case. For example with the use of ICF multiple functions can
be represented with the same code, meaning that the address found in a
.stack_size entry corresponds to multiple function symbols.
This change allows multiple function names to be displayed when
appropriate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105884
llvm-readelf is a user-facing tool which emulates GNU readelf. Remove one-dash
long options which are not recognized by GNU style `getopt_long`. This ensures
long options cannot collide with grouped short options.
Note: the documentation (D63719)/help messages have recommended the double-dash
forms since LLVM 9.0.0.
llvm-readobj is intended as an internal tool which has some flexibility.
llvm-readelf/llvm-readobj use the same option parsing code and llvm-readobj's
one-dash long options aren't used after test migration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106037
This is a follow up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D104080, and ca3bdb57fa (diff-e64a48fabe31db213a631fdc5f2acb51bdddf3f16a8fb2928784f4c579229585). The implementation of call graph profile was changed from a black box section to relocation approach. This was done to be compatible with post processing tools like strip/objcopy, and llvm equivalent. When they are invoked on object file before the final linking step with this new approach the symbol indices correctness is preserved.
The GNU binutils tools change the REL section to RELA section, unlike llvm tools. For example when strip -S is run on the ELF object files, as an intermediate step before linking. To preserve compatibility this patch extends implementation in LLD and ELFDumper to support both REL and RELA sections for call graph profile.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105217
Users should generally observe no difference as long as they don't use
unintended option forms. Behavior changes:
* `-t=d` is removed. Use `-t d` instead.
* `--demangle=false` and `--demangle=0` cannot be used. Omit the option or use `--no-demangle`. Other flag-style options don't have `--no-` forms.
* `--help-list` is removed. This is a `cl::` specific option.
* llvm-readobj now supports grouped short options as well.
* `--color` is removed. This is generally not useful (only apply to errors/warnings) but was inherited from Support.
Some adjustment to the canonical forms
(usually from GNU readelf; currently llvm-readobj has too many redundant aliases):
* --dyn-syms is canonical. --dyn-symbols is a hidden alias
* --file-header is canonical. --file-headers is a hidden alias
* --histogram is canonical. --elf-hash-histogram is a hidden alias
* --relocs is canonical. --relocations is a hidden alias
* --section-groups is canonical. --elf-section-groups is a hidden alias
OptTable avoids global option collision if we decide to support multiplexing for binary utilities.
* Most one-dash long options are still supported. `-dt, -sd, -st, -sr` are dropped due to their conflict with grouped short options.
* `--section-mapping=false` (D57365) is strange but is kept for now.
* Many `cl::opt` variables were unnecessarily external. I added `static` whenever appropriate.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105532
C++23 will make these conversions ambiguous - so fix them to make the
codebase forward-compatible with C++23 (& a follow-up change I've made
will make this ambiguous/invalid even in <C++23 so we don't regress
this & it generally improves the code anyway)
Summary: The patch adds the StringTable dumping to
llvm-readobj. Currently only XCOFF is supported.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104613
llvm-readobj is an internal testing tool for binary formats. Its output and
command line options do not need to be stable. It isn't supposed to be part of a
build process.
llvm-readelf was created as a user-facing utility and its interface intends to
be compatible with GNU readelf (unless there are good reasons not to).
The two tools have mostly compatible options. -s and -t are noticeable
exceptions due to history. I think the cost of keeping the inconsistency
overweighs the little history-compatible benefit and hinders transition from
cl::opt to OptTable, so let's change it.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105055
... even on targets preferring RELA. The section is only consumed by ld.lld
which can handle REL.
Follow-up to D104080 as I explained in the review. There are two advantages:
* The D104080 code only handles RELA, so arm/i386/mips32 etc may warn for -fprofile-use=/-fprofile-sample-use= usage.
* Decrease object file size for RELA targets
While here, change the relocation to relocate weights, instead of 0,1,2,3,..
I failed to catch the issue during review.
Currently when .llvm.call-graph-profile is created by llvm it explicitly encodes the symbol indices. This section is basically a black box for post processing tools. For example, if we run strip -s on the object files the symbol table changes, but indices in that section do not. In non-visible behavior indices point to wrong symbols. The visible behavior indices point outside of Symbol table: "invalid symbol index".
This patch changes the format by using R_*_NONE relocations to indicate the from/to symbols. The Frequency (Weight) will still be in the .llvm.call-graph-profile, but symbol information will be in relocation section. In LLD information from both sections is used to reconstruct call graph profile. Relocations themselves will never be applied.
With this approach post processing tools that handle relocations correctly work for this section also. Tools can add/remove symbols and as long as they handle relocation sections with this approach information stays correct.
Doing a quick experiment with clang-13.
The size went up from 107KB to 322KB, aggregate of all the input sections. Size of clang-13 binary is ~118MB. For users of -fprofile-use/-fprofile-sample-use the size of object files will go up slightly, it will not impact final binary size.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104080
Add in the ability of parsing symbol table for 64 bit object.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, DiggerLin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85774
This patch uses the `getSymbolIndexForFunctionAddress` helper function to print function names for BB address map entries.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102900
Currently, each function name lookup is a linear iteration over all symbols defined in the object file which makes the total running time quadratic.
This patch optimizes the function name lookup by populating an **address to index** map upon the first function name lookup which is used to lookup each function name in O(1).
**impact**: For the clang binary built with `-fstack-size-section`, this improves the running time of `llvm-readobj --stack-size` from 7 minutes to 0.25 seconds.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103072
The readelf command guide shows the short options used as aliases but
these are not found in the help text unless --show-hidden is used, other
tools show aliases with --help. This change fixes the help output to be
consistent with the command guide.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102173
Unwind info generated by MSVC tends to have relocations pointing at
static "label" symbols like "$LN4" instead of regular ones based on
the actual function's name. Try to resolve such symbols to a non-label
symbol if possible (ideally to an external symbol), to improve
the readability.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101567
The right symbol flag mask is ~0x7, not ~0xf.
Also emit string names for the other flags (we were missing some).
Reviewed By: #lld-macho, gkm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101548
When looking up data referenced from pdata/xdata structures, the
referenced data can be found in two different ways:
- For an unrelocated object file, it's located via a relocation
- For a relocated, linked image, the data is referenced with an
(image relative) absolute address
For the latter case, the absolute address can optionally be
described with a symbol.
For the case of an object file, there's two offsets involved; one
immediate offset encoded in the data location that is modified by
the relocation, and a section offset in the symbol.
Previously, for the ExceptionRecord field, we printed the offset
from the symbol (only) but used the immediate offset ignoring
the symbol's address (using only the symbol's section) for printing
the exception data.
Add a helper method for doing the lookup and address calculation,
for simplifying the calling code and making all the cases consistent.
This addresses an existing FIXME comment, fixing printing of the
exception data for cases where relocations point at individual
symbols in the xdata section (which is what MSVC generates) instead of
all relocations pointing at the start of the xdata section (which is
what LLVM generates).
This also fixes printing of the function name for packed entries in
linked images.
Relanded with a format string fix in the formatSymbol function; one
can't use %X as format string for an uint64_t. That bug has been
present since this code was added in e6971cab30.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100305
This reverts commit 3778924088.
The added test fails on at least one buildbot, by printing a reversed
combination, printing "func3_xdata +0x18 (0x8)" while it's supposed to
be "func3_xdata +0x8 (0x18)", see e.g.
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/107/builds/7269. Currently
no idea how that could happen, but reverting until it can be figured
out.
When looking up data referenced from pdata/xdata structures, the
referenced data can be found in two different ways:
- For an unrelocated object file, it's located via a relocation
- For a relocated, linked image, the data is referenced with an
(image relative) absolute address
For the latter case, the absolute address can optionally be
described with a symbol.
For the case of an object file, there's two offsets involved; one
immediate offset encoded in the data location that is modified by
the relocation, and a section offset in the symbol.
Previously, for the ExceptionRecord field, we printed the offset
from the symbol (only) but used the immediate offset ignoring
the symbol's address (using only the symbol's section) for printing
the exception data.
Add a helper method for doing the lookup and address calculation,
for simplifying the calling code and making all the cases consistent.
This addresses an existing FIXME comment, fixing printing of the
exception data for cases where relocations point at individual
symbols in the xdata section (which is what MSVC generates) instead of
all relocations pointing at the start of the xdata section (which is
what LLVM generates).
This also fixes printing of the function name for packed entries in
linked images.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100305
The `e_flags` contains a mixture of bitfields and regular ones, ensure all of them can be serialized and deserialized.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100250
This patch adds support for TLS variables to the XCOFF object writer:
- Add TData and TBSS sections
- Add CsectGroups for the mapping classes XCOFF::XMC_TL and XCOFF::XMC_UL
- Add XMC_UL in the enum entry of CsectStorageMapping class to print the string
while reading the symbol properties for TLS variables
- Fix the starting address of TData and TBSS sections
Reviewed by: hubert.reinterpretcast, DiggerLin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98946
In future patches I will be setting the IsText parameter frequently so I will refactor the args to be in the following order. I have removed the FileSize parameter because it is never used.
```
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<MemoryBuffer>>
getFile(const Twine &Filename, bool IsText = false,
bool RequiresNullTerminator = true, bool IsVolatile = false);
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<MemoryBuffer>>
getFileOrSTDIN(const Twine &Filename, bool IsText = false,
bool RequiresNullTerminator = true);
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<MB>>
getFileAux(const Twine &Filename, uint64_t MapSize, uint64_t Offset,
bool IsText, bool RequiresNullTerminator, bool IsVolatile);
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<WritableMemoryBuffer>>
getFile(const Twine &Filename, bool IsVolatile = false);
```
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99182
This patch renames the "Initial" member of WasmLimits to the name used
in the spec, "Minimum".
In the core WebAssembly specification, the Limits data type has one
required "min" member and one optional "max" member, indicating the
minimum required size of the corresponding table or memory, and the
maximum size, if any.
Although the WebAssembly spec does instantiate locally-defined tables
and memories with the initial size being equal to the minimum size, it
can't impose such a requirement for imports. It doesn't make sense to
require an initial size for a memory import, for example. The compiler
can only sensibly express the minimum and maximum sizes.
See
https://github.com/WebAssembly/js-types/blob/master/proposals/js-types/Overview.md#naming-of-size-limits
for a related discussion that agrees that the right name of "initial" is
"minimum" when querying the type of a table or memory from JavaScript.
(Of course it still makes sense for JS to speak in terms of an initial
size when it explicitly instantiates memories and tables.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99186
This patch adds a fallthrough bit to basic block metadata, indicating whether the basic block can fallthrough without taking any branches. The bit will help us avoid an intel LBR bug which results in occasional duplicate entries at the beginning of the LBR stack.
This patch uses `MachineBasicBlock::canFallThrough()` to set the bit. This is not a const method because it eventually calls `TargetInstrInfo::analyzeBranch`, but it calls this function with the default `AllowModify=false`. So we can either make the argument to the `getBBAddrMapMetadata` non-const, or we can use `const_cast` when calling `canFallThrough`. I decide to go with the latter since this is purely due to legacy code, and in general we should not allow the BasicBlock to be mutable during `getBBAddrMapMetadata`.
Reviewed By: tmsriram
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96918
The current support only printed coredump notes, but most binaries also
contain notes. This change adds names for four FreeBSD-specific notes and
pretty-prints three of them:
NT_FREEBSD_ABI_TAG:
This note holds a 32-bit (decimal) integer containing the value of the
__FreeBSD_version macro, which is defined in crt1.o and will hold a value
such as 1300076 for a binary build on a FreeBSD 13 system.
NT_FREEBSD_ARCH_TAG:
A string containing the value of the build-time MACHINE_ARCH
NT_FREEBSD_FEATURE_CTL: A 32-bit flag that indicates to the kernel that
the binary wants certain bevahiour. Examples include setting
NT_FREEBSD_FCTL_ASLR_DISABLE which tells the kernel to disable ASLR.
After this change llvm-readobj also no longer decodes coredump-only
FreeBSD notes in non-coredump files. I've also converted the
note-freebsd.s test to use yaml2obj instead of llvm-mc.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74393
Currently, if the note name is known, but the value isn't we don't print
the contents.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74367
In binutils, the flag is defined for ELFOSABI_GNU and ELFOSABI_FREEBSD.
It can be used to mark a section as a GC root.
In practice, the flag has generic semantics and can be applied to many
EI_OSABI values, so we consider it generic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95728
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43543
Currently we report "The file was not recognized as a valid object file" for BC files.
Also, we terminate dumping.
Instead we could report a better warning and try to continue dumping other files.
This is what this patch implements.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95605
A default version (@@) is only available for defined symbols.
Currently we use "@@" for undefined symbols too.
This patch fixes the issue and improves our test case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95219
`ELFDumper.cpp` implements the functionality that allows to get symbol versions.
It is used for dumping versioned symbols.
This helps to implement https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48670 ("make llvm-nm -D print version names"):
we can move out and reuse the code from `ELFDumper.cpp`.
This is what this patch do: it moves the related functionality to `ELFFile<ELFT>`.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94771
This addressed post commit comments for D93900.
GCC had an issue and requires placing a specialization of
`printUnwindInfo` to a namespace to compile:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=56480
This commit adds table symbol support in a partial way, while still
including some special cases for the __indirect_function_table symbol.
No change in tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94075
Currently we don't support multiple SHT_SYMTAB_SHNDX sections
and the DT_SYMTAB_SHNDX tag currently.
This patch implements it and fixes the
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43991.
I had to introduce the `struct DataRegion` to ELF.h,
it is used to represent a region that might have no known size.
It is needed, because we don't know the size of the extended
section indices table when it is located via DT_SYMTAB_SHNDX.
In this case we still want to validate that we don't read
past the end of the file.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92923
Add `this->` for `W`, which is the member of `ObjDumper`
An example of error:
readobj/ELFDumper.cpp:738:13: error: use of undeclared identifier 'W'
assert(&W.getOStream() == &llvm::fouts());
This adds the `template` keyword for 'getAsArrayRef' calls.
An example of error:
/b/1/openmp-gcc-x86_64-linux-debian/llvm.src/llvm/tools/llvm-readobj/ELFDumper.cpp:4491:50: error: use 'template' keyword to treat 'getAsArrayRef' as a dependent template name
for (const Elf_Rel &Rel : this->DynRelRegion.getAsArrayRef<Elf_Rel>())
This should fix bots after landing D93900.
An example of error is:
/home/worker/2.0.1/lldb-x86_64-debian/llvm-project/llvm/tools/llvm-readobj/ELFDumper.cpp:883:8: warning: 'printSectionMapping' overrides a member function but is not marked 'override' [-Winconsistent-missing-override]
void printSectionMapping() {}
This is a refactoring for design of stuff in `ELFDumper.cpp`.
The current design of ELF dumper is far from ideal.
Currently most overridden functions (inherited from `ObjDumper`) in `ELFDumper` just forward to
the functions of `ELFDumperStyle` (which can be either `GNUStyle` or `LLVMStyle`).
A concrete implementation may be in any of `ELFDumper`/`DumperStyle`/`GNUStyle`/`LLVMStyle`.
This patch reorganizes the classes by introducing `GNUStyleELFDumper`/`LLVMStyleELFDumper`
which inherit from `ELFDumper`. The implementations are moved:
`DumperStyle` -> `ELFDumper`
`GNUStyle` -> `GNUStyleELFDumper`
`LLVMStyle` -> `LLVMStyleELFDumper`
With that we can avoid having a lot of redirection calls and helper methods.
The number of code lines changes from 7142 to 6922 (reduced by ~3%) and the
code overall looks cleaner.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93900
As was mentioned in comments here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92636#inline-864967
we are not consistent and sometimes index things from 0, but sometimes
from 1 in warnings.
This patch fixes 2 places: messages reported for
program headers and messages reported for relocations.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93805
As the actual windows unwinder doesn't support this case, don't
pretend that it is supported when dumping the generated unwind info
either, even if it would be possible to interpret it as something
sensible.
This should reduce the risk of us emitting such a case in code
(although it's unlikely as long as the unwind info is generated
through the SEH opcodes, as the opcodes can't describe this case).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91529
It was discussed in D92545 that we might want to improve messages
reported when something is wrong with the stack size section.
This patch does it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93802
Currently llvm-readelf might print "OS Specific/Processor Specific/<unknown>"
hint when dumping the ELF file type. The patch teaches llvm-readobj to do the same.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40868
I am removing `Object/elf-unknown-type.test` test because it is not in the right place,
it is outdated and very limited.
The `readobj/ELF/file-types.test` checks the functionality much better.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93689
Currently, `ELFFile<ELFT>::getEntry` does not check an index of
an entry. Because of that the code might read past the end of the symbol
table silently. I've added a test to `llvm-readobj\ELF\relocations.test`
to demonstrate the possible issue. Also, I've added a unit test for
this method.
After this change, `getEntry` stops reporting the section index and
reuses the `getSectionContentsAsArray` method, which already has
all the validation needed. Our related warnings now provide
more and better context sometimes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93209
It mimics the GNU readelf where it prints a [VARIANT_PCS] for symbols
with st_other with STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS.
Reviewed By: grimar, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93044
This is https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45698.
Specification says that
"Loadable segment entries in the program header table appear
in ascending order, sorted on the p_vaddr member."
Our `toMappedAddr()` relies on this condition. This patch
adds a warning when the sorting order of loadable segments is wrong.
In this case we force segments sorting and that allows
`toMappedAddr()` to work as expected.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92641
This is a change suggested in post commit comments for
D93096 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D93096#2451796).
Imagine we want to add a custom OS specific ELF file type.
For that we can update the `ElfObjectFileType` array:
```
static const EnumEntry<unsigned> ElfObjectFileType[] = {
...
{"Core", "CORE (Core file)", ELF::ET_CORE},
{"MyType", "MyType (my description)", 0xfe01},
};
```
The current code then might print:
```
OS Specific: (MyType (my description))
```
Though instead we probably would like to see a nicer output, e.g:
```
Type: MyType (my description)
```
To achieve that we can reorder the code slightly.
It is impossible to add a test I think, because we have no custom values in
the `ElfObjectFileType` array in LLVM.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93217
This is related to https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40868.
Currently we don't print `OS Specific`/``Processor Specific`/`<unknown>`
prefixes when dumping the ELF file type. This is not consistent
with GNU readelf. The patch fixes it.
Also, this patch removes the `types.test`, because we already have
`file-types.test`, which tests more cases and this patch revealed that
we have such a duplicate.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93096
This changes the `printNotesHelper` to report warnings on its side when
there are errors when dumping notes.
With that we can provide more content when reporting warnings about broken notes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92636
This rewrites the logic to get rid of "ELFSymbolRef" API where possible.
This allowed to handle possible errors better, improve warnings reported and add new ones.
Also 'reportWarning' was replaced with 'reportUniqueWarning'
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92545
This implementation of `ELFDumper<ELFT>::printAttributes()` in llvm-readobj has issues:
1) It crashes when the content of the attribute section is empty.
2) It uses `unwrapOrError` and `reportWarning` calls, though
ideally we want to use `reportUniqueWarning`.
3) It contains a TODO about redundant format version check.
`lib/Support/ELFAttributeParser.cpp` uses a hardcoded constant instead of the named constant.
This patch fixes all these issues.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92318
This:
1) Changes `reportWarning` to `reportUniqueWarning` (no-op here).
2) Adds more context to the message.
3) Merges `broken-dynsym-link.test` into `dyn-symbols.test`, adds more testing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92380
This introduces the overload for `reportUniqueWarning` which allows
to avoid using `createError` in many places.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92371
This is a part of the plan we had previously to convert all calls to
`reportUniqueWarning` and then rename it to just `reportWarning`.
I was a bit unsure about this particular change at first, because it doesn't add a
new functionality: seems it is impossible to trigger a warning duplication currently.
At the same time I find the idea of the plan mentioned very reasonable.
And with that we will be sure that `DynRegionInfo` can't report duplicate
warnings, what looks like a nice feature for possible refactorings and further tool development.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92224
This moves the `reportUniqueWarning` method to the base class.
My motivation is the following:
I've experimented with replacing `reportWarning` calls with `reportUniqueWarning`
in ELF dumper. I've found that for example for removing them from `DynRegionInfo` helper
class, it is worth to pass a dumper instance to it (to be able to call dumper()->reportUniqueWarning()).
The problem was that `ELFDumper<ELFT>` is a template class. I had to make `DynRegionInfo` to be templated
and do lots of minor changes everywhere what did not look reasonable/nice.
At the same time I guess one day other dumpers like COFF/MachO/Wasm etc might want to
start using `reportUniqueWarning` API too. Then it looks reasonable to move the logic to the
base class.
With that the problem of passing the dumper instance will be gone.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92218
This is related to MIPS. Currently we might report an error and exit,
though there is no problem to report a warning and try to continue dumping
an object. The code uses `MipsGOTParser<ELFT> Parser`, which is isolated
in this method.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92090
This addresses post review comment for D92018.
The warning was:
```
error: loop variable 'Note' is always a copy because the range of type 'iterator_range<llvm::object::ELFFile<llvm::object::ELFType<llvm::support::big, true> >::Elf_Note_Iterator>' (aka 'iterator_range<Elf_Note_Iterator_Impl<ELFType<(llvm::support::endianness)0U, true> > >') does not return a reference [-Werror,-Wrange-loop-analysis]
for (const typename ELFT::Note &Note : Obj.notes(S, Err))
```
This starts using `reportUniqueWarnings` instead of `reportError`
in the code that is responsible for dumping notes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92021
`notes_begin()` is used for iterating over notes. This API in some cases might print
section type and index. At the same time during iterating, the `Elf_Note_Iterator`
might omit it as it doesn't have this info.
Because of above we might have the redundant duplication of information in warnings:
(See D92021).
```
warning: '[[FILE]]': unable to read notes from the SHT_NOTE section with index 1: SHT_NOTE section [index 1] has invalid offset (0x40) or size (0xffff0000)
```
This change stops reporting section index/type in Object/ELF.h/notes_begin().
(FTR, this was introduced by me for llvm-readobj in D64470).
Instead we can describe sections/program headers on the caller side.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92081
AVR and PPC64 bots reports link errors:
(http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/112/builds/1522)
(http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/52/builds/1764)
/tmp/cclOvLx0.s: Assembler messages:
/tmp/cclOvLx0.s:9223: Error: symbol `_ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/cclOvLx0.s:9227: Error: symbol `.L._ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/cclOvLx0.s:10272: Error: symbol `_ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/cclOvLx0.s:10276: Error: symbol `.L._ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/cclOvLx0.s:10285: Error: symbol `_ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/cclOvLx0.s:10289: Error: symbol `.L._ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/ccFJYr6I.s: Assembler messages:
/tmp/ccFJYr6I.s:6284: Error: symbol `_ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/ccFJYr6I.s:7053: Error: symbol `_ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
/tmp/ccFJYr6I.s:7093: Error: symbol `_ZN4llvm12function_refIFvvEE11callback_fnIUlvE2_EEvl' is already defined
I *guess* the reason might be the default lambda argument. I've removed it.
We have a similar logic for LLVM/GNU styles that can be deduplicated.
This will allow to replace `reportError` calls with `reportUniqueWarning`
calls in a single place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92018
This:
1) Changes its signature.
2) Refines the name of local variable (`SymTabName`->`LinkedSecName`,
because SHT_GNU_verneed/SHT_GNU_verdef are linked with the string table, not with the symbol table).
3) Stops using the `unwrapOrError` inside.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91964
This stops using `RelocationRef` API in the `printStackSize` method
and starts using the "regular" API that is used in almost all other places
in ELFDumper.cpp.
This is not only makes the code to be more consistent, but helps to diagnose
issues better, because the `ELFObjectFile` API, which is used
currently to implement stack sized dumping sometimes has a behavior
that just doesn't work well for broken inputs.
E.g see how it gets the `symbol_end` iterator. It will just not work
well for a case when the `sh_size` is broken.
```
template <class ELFT>
basic_symbol_iterator ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::symbol_end() const {
...
DataRefImpl Sym = toDRI(SymTab, SymTab->sh_size / sizeof(Elf_Sym));
return basic_symbol_iterator(SymbolRef(Sym, this));
}
```
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91624
D91867 introduced the `tryGetSectionName` helper.
But we have `getPrintableSectionName` member with the similar
behavior which we can reuse. This patch does it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91954
It is possible to trigger a crash/misbehavior when the st_name field of
the signature symbol goes past the end of the string table.
This patch fixes it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91943
It is possible to trigger reading past the EOF by breaking fields like
DT_PLTRELSZ, DT_RELSZ or DT_RELASZ
This patch adds a validation in `DynRegionInfo` helper class.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91787
Our code that dumps groups has 3 noticeable issues:
1) It uses `unwrapOrError` in many places.
2) It doesn't allow reporting unique warnings, because the `getGroups` helper is not
a member of `DumpStyle<ELFT>`.
3) It might just crash. See the comment for `StrTableOrErr->data() + Sym.st_name` line.
In this patch I am starting addressing these points.
For start I've converted one of `unwrapOrError` calls to a unique warning.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91798
Our `printStackSize` implementation currently uses
API like `RelocationRef`, `object::symbol_iterator`.
It is not ideal as it doesn't allow
to handle possible error conditions properly.
Some time ago I started rewriting it and this NFC patch is
a one more step toward to it. Here I am introducing the
`forEachRelocationDo` helper. With it it is possible to iterate
over all kinds of relocations, what is helpful for improving
the code in `printStackSize` and around.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91530
This allows to reuse the RelocationResolver from the code
that doesn't want to deal with `RelocationRef` class.
I am going to use it in llvm-readobj. See the description
of D91530 for more details.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91533
This patch adds support for creating Guard Address-Taken IAT Entry Tables (.giats$y sections) in object files, matching the behavior of MSVC. These contain lists of address-taken imported functions, which are used by the linker to create the final GIATS table.
Additionally, if any DLLs are delay-loaded, the linker must look through the .giats tables and add the respective load thunks of address-taken imports to the GFIDS table, as these are also valid call targets.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87544
No longer rely on an external tool to build the llvm component layout.
Instead, leverage the existing `add_llvm_componentlibrary` cmake function and
introduce `add_llvm_component_group` to accurately describe component behavior.
These function store extra properties in the created targets. These properties
are processed once all components are defined to resolve library dependencies
and produce the header expected by llvm-config.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90848
This broke both Firefox and Chromium (PR47905) due to what seems like dllimport
function not being handled correctly.
> This patch adds support for creating Guard Address-Taken IAT Entry Tables (.giats$y sections) in object files, matching the behavior of MSVC. These contain lists of address-taken imported functions, which are used by the linker to create the final GIATS table.
> Additionally, if any DLLs are delay-loaded, the linker must look through the .giats tables and add the respective load thunks of address-taken imports to the GFIDS table, as these are also valid call targets.
>
> Reviewed By: rnk
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87544
This reverts commit cfd8481da1.
This is recommit for D90903 with fixes for BB:
1) Used std::move<> when returning Expected<> (http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/112/builds/913)
2) Fixed the name of temporarily file in the file-headers.test (http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/36/builds/1269)
(a local old temporarily file was used before)
For creating `ELFObjectFile` instances we have the factory method
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create(MemoryBufferRef Object)`.
The problem of this method is that it scans the section header to locate some sections.
When a file is truncated or has broken fields in the ELF header, this approach does
not allow us to create the `ELFObjectFile` and dump the ELF header.
This is https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40804
This patch suggests a solution - it allows to delay scaning sections in the
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create`. It now allows user code to call an object
initialization (`initContent()`) later. With that it is possible,
for example, for dumpers just to dump the file header and exit.
By default initialization is still performed as before, what helps to keep
the logic of existent callers untouched.
I've experimented with different approaches when worked on this patch.
I think this approach is better than doing initialization of sections (i.e. scan of them)
on demand, because normally users of `ELFObjectFile` API expect to work with a valid object.
In most cases when a section header table can't be read (because of an error), we don't
have to continue to work with object. So we probably don't need to implement a more complex API.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90903
For creating `ELFObjectFile` instances we have the factory method
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create(MemoryBufferRef Object)`.
The problem of this method is that it scans the section header to locate some sections.
When a file is truncated or has broken fields in the ELF header, this approach does
not allow us to create the `ELFObjectFile` and dump the ELF header.
This is https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40804
This patch suggests a solution - it allows to delay scaning sections in the
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create`. It now allows user code to call an object
initialization (`initContent()`) later. With that it is possible,
for example, for dumpers just to dump the file header and exit.
By default initialization is still performed as before, what helps to keep
the logic of existent callers untouched.
I've experimented with different approaches when worked on this patch.
I think this approach is better than doing initialization of sections (i.e. scan of them)
on demand, because normally users of `ELFObjectFile` API expect to work with a valid object.
In most cases when a section header table can't be read (because of an error), we don't
have to continue to work with object. So we probably don't need to implement a more complex API.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90903
This differentiates the Ryzen 4000/4300/4500/4700 series APUs that were
previously included in gfx909.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90419
Change-Id: Ia901a7157eb2f73ccd9f25dbacec38427312377d
Currently it is impossible to create an instance of ELFObjectFile when the
SHT_SYMTAB_SHNDX can't be read. We error out when fail to parse the
SHT_SYMTAB_SHNDX section in the factory method.
This change delays reading of the SHT_SYMTAB_SHNDX section entries,
with it llvm-readobj is now able to work with such inputs.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89379
There is a possible scenario when we crash when dumping dynamic relocations.
For that we should have no section headers (to take the number of synamic symbols from)
and a dynamic relocation that refers to a symbol with an index that is too large to be in a file.
The patch fixes it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90214
--section-details/-t is a GNU readelf option that produce
an output that is an alternative to --sections.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89304
The current situation/behavior is:
1) llvm-readelf doesn't need a string that is specified by `DT_SONAME`.
2) llvm-readobj/elf always tries to read it, even when there is no `DT_SONAME` tag.
3) Because of that both tools reports a warning for many our test cases.
This patch delays getting a SOName string and changes the behavior (llvm-readobj) to
only report a warning when there is a `DT_SONAME` and a string cab't be read.
Warning is not reported for llvm-readelf, as it never tries to dump it.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89384
Format specifiers of incorrect length are replaced with format specifier
macros from `<cinttypes>` matching the typedefs used to declare the type
of the value being printed.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89637
This patch adds support for creating Guard Address-Taken IAT Entry Tables (.giats$y sections) in object files, matching the behavior of MSVC. These contain lists of address-taken imported functions, which are used by the linker to create the final GIATS table.
Additionally, if any DLLs are delay-loaded, the linker must look through the .giats tables and add the respective load thunks of address-taken imports to the GFIDS table, as these are also valid call targets.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87544
This diff is similar to what D71394 did for `llvm-objdump` -- it avoids
trying to look up a section name for STABS symbols, since some STABS
symbol types (like `N_OSO`) use the `n_sect` field to store other data
instead of a section index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88468
If the metadata is valid yaml, we can print it, even if it failed
validation. That makes it easier to debug any wrong metadata.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89243
Specification for `SHT_HASH` table says (https://refspecs.linuxbase.org/elf/gabi4+/ch5.dynamic.html#hash)
that it contains `Elf32_Word` entries for both `32/64` bit objects.
But there is a problem with `EM_S390` and `ELF::EM_ALPHA` platforms: they use 8-bytes entries.
(see the issue reported: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47681).
Currently we might infer the size of the dynamic symbols table from hash table,
but because of the issue mentioned, the calculation is wrong. And also we don't dump the hash table
properly.
I am not sure if we want to support 8-bytes entries as they violates specification and also the
`.hash` table is kind of deprecated by itself (the `.gnu.hash` table is used nowadays).
So, the solution this patch suggests is to ban using of the hash table on `EM_S390/EM_ALPHA` platforms.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88817
At AMD, in an internal audit of our code, we found some corner cases
where we were not quite differentiating targets enough for some old
hardware. This commit is part of fixing that by adding three new
targets:
* The "Oland" and "Hainan" variants of gfx601 are now split out into
gfx602. LLPC (in the GPUOpen driver) and other front-ends could use
that to avoid using the shaderZExport workaround on gfx602.
* One variant of gfx703 is now split out into gfx705. LLPC and other
front-ends could use that to avoid using the
shaderSpiCsRegAllocFragmentation workaround on gfx705.
* The "TongaPro" variant of gfx802 is now split out into gfx805.
TongaPro has a faster 64-bit shift than its former friends in gfx802,
and a subtarget feature could be set up for that to take advantage of
it. This commit does not make that change; it just adds the target.
V2: Add clang changes. Put TargetParser list in order.
V3: AMDGCNGPUs table in TargetParser.cpp needs to be in GPUKind order,
so fix the GPUKind order.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88916
Change-Id: Ia901a7157eb2f73ccd9f25dbacec38427312377d
It fixes possible scenarios when we crash/assert with `--hash-symbols` when
dumping an invalid GNU hash table which has a broken value in the buckets array.
This fixes a crash reported in comments for
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47681
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88561
We have `--addrsig` implemented for `llvm-readobj`.
Usually it is convenient to use a single tool for dumping,
so it seems we might want to implement `--addrsig` for `llvm-readelf` too.
I've selected a simple output format which is a bit similar to one,
used for dumping of the symbol table. It looks like:
```
Address-significant symbols section '.llvm_addrsig' contains 2 entries:
Num: Name
1: foo
2: bar
```
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88835
This patch adds support for creating Guard Address-Taken IAT Entry Tables (.giats$y sections) in object files, matching the behavior of MSVC. These contain lists of address-taken imported functions, which are used by the linker to create the final GIATS table.
Additionally, if any DLLs are delay-loaded, the linker must look through the .giats tables and add the respective load thunks of address-taken imports to the GFIDS table, as these are also valid call targets.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87544
This is the one more patch for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47581
It fixes how we print an information for the Generic model. With this patch
we are able to read values from `.ARM.extab` and dump proper personality routines names/addresses.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88478
This is a part of https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47581.
We have the following computation:
```
(1) uint64_t Location = Address & 0x7fffffff;
(2) if (Location & 0x04000000)
(3) Location |= (uint64_t) ~0x7fffffff;
(4) return Location + Place;
```
At line 2 there is a mistype. The constant should be `0x40000000`,
not `0x04000000`, because the intention here is to sign extend the `Location`,
which is the 31 bit signed value.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88407
This is the first patch for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47581.
Currently -u does not compute function addresses correctly and
dumps broken addresses for non-relocatable objects.
ARM spec says:
"An index table entry consists of 2 words.
The first word contains a prel31 offset (see Relocations) to the start of a function, with bit 31 clear."
...
"The relocated 31 bits form a place-relative signed offset to the referenced entity.
For brevity, this document will refer to the results of these relocations as "prel31 offsets"."
(https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ihi0038/c/?lang=en#index-table-entries)
(https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ihi0038/c/?lang=en#relocations)
Currently we use an address of the SHT_ARM_EXIDX section instead of an address of an entry
in computations. As a result we compute an offset that is not really "place-relative",
but section relative, what is wrong.
The patch fixes this issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88076
In a post review comments for D88097 it was mentioned that code
triggers bunch of warnings of the form:
llvm/tools/llvm-readobj/ELFDumper.cpp:5299:28: warning: loop variable 'Note' is always a copy because
the range of type 'iterator_range<llvm::object::ELFFile<llvm::object::ELFType<llvm::support::big, true> >::Elf_Note_Iterator>'
(aka 'iterator_range<Elf_Note_Iterator_Impl<ELFType<(llvm::support::endianness)0U, true> > >') does not return a reference [-Wrange-loop-analysis]
for (const Elf_Note &Note : this->Obj.notes(P, Err))
It happens because Elf_Note is always copied here:
Elf_Note_Impl<ELFT> operator*() const {
assert(Nhdr && "dereferenced ELF note end iterator");
return Elf_Note_Impl<ELFT>(*Nhdr);
}
This patch fixes the issue by removing a reference.
Recent refactoring introduced a symbol index argument for `getFullSymbolName` method,
which is only used for reporting error messages about invalid extended symbol indexes.
There are few issues in the implementation and we don't report correct symbol indices
when dumping MIPS GOT/PLT entries currently.
This patch adds test cases and fixes the issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88089
Currently `--relocations` ignores section symbol names and always prints
section names for them. This is inconsistent with GNU readelf and with `--symbols`.
We have a code in `getFullSymbolName` (which is used for `--symbols`) which can be
reused for `getRelocationTarget` (used for `--relocations`).
With that the issue described is fixed and code becomes a bit shorter.
Also with this change we start to print more relocations (in situations when we just
showed warnings instead before) and also start to report more diagnostic warnings
(see reloc-zero-name-or-value.test).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87613
This:
1) Replaces pointers with references in many places.
2) Adds few TODOs about fixing possible unhandled errors (in ARMEHABIPrinter.h).
3) Replaces `auto`s with actual types.
4) Removes excessive arguments.
5) Adds `const ELFFile<ELFT> &Obj;` member to `ELFDumper` to simplify the code.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88097
We have an issue with `getFullSymbolName`: it assumes that the symbol passed is
always in the `.symtab`, what is wrong. We might calculate and report a wrong index currently.
I've added a test case revealing that.
This patch adds the "symbol index" argument to `getFullSymbolName` signature,
what fixes the issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87899