Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Rafael Auler fc0ced73dc Add BAT testing framework
This patch refactors BAT to be testable as a library, so we
can have open-source tests on it. This further fixes an issue with
basic blocks that lack a valid input offset, making BAT omit those
when writing translation tables.

Test Plan: new testcases added, new testing tool added (llvm-bat-dump)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129382
2022-07-29 14:55:04 -07:00
John Ericson 07b749800c [cmake] Don't export `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` anymore
First of all, `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` put there breaks our NixOS
builds, because `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` defined the same as
`CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR` becomes an *absolute* path, and then when
downstream projects try to install there too this breaks because our
builds always install to fresh directories for isolation's sake.

Second of all, note that `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` stands out against the
other specially crafted `LLVM_CONFIG_*` variables substituted in
`llvm/cmake/modules/LLVMConfig.cmake.in`.

@beanz added it in d0e1c2a550 to fix a
dangling reference in `AddLLVM`, but I am suspicious of how this
variable doesn't follow the pattern.

Those other ones are carefully made to be build-time vs install-time
variables depending on which `LLVMConfig.cmake` is being generated, are
carefully made relative as appropriate, etc. etc. For my NixOS use-case
they are also fine because they are never used as downstream install
variables, only for reading not writing.

To avoid the problems I face, and restore symmetry, I deleted the
exported and arranged to have many `${project}_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR`s.
`AddLLVM` now instead expects each project to define its own, and they
do so based on `CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR`. `LLVMConfig` still exports
`LLVM_TOOLS_BINARY_DIR` which is the location for the tools defined in
the usual way, matching the other remaining exported variables.

For the `AddLLVM` changes, I tried to copy the existing pattern of
internal vs non-internal or for LLVM vs for downstream function/macro
names, but it would good to confirm I did that correctly.

Reviewed By: nikic

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117977
2022-07-21 19:04:00 +00:00
John Ericson 0bb317b7bf Revert "[cmake] Don't export `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` anymore"
This reverts commit d5daa5c5b0.
2022-06-10 19:26:12 +00:00
John Ericson d5daa5c5b0 [cmake] Don't export `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` anymore
First of all, `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` put there breaks our NixOS
builds, because `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` defined the same as
`CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR` becomes an *absolute* path, and then when
downstream projects try to install there too this breaks because our
builds always install to fresh directories for isolation's sake.

Second of all, note that `LLVM_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR` stands out against the
other specially crafted `LLVM_CONFIG_*` variables substituted in
`llvm/cmake/modules/LLVMConfig.cmake.in`.

@beanz added it in d0e1c2a550 to fix a
dangling reference in `AddLLVM`, but I am suspicious of how this
variable doesn't follow the pattern.

Those other ones are carefully made to be build-time vs install-time
variables depending on which `LLVMConfig.cmake` is being generated, are
carefully made relative as appropriate, etc. etc. For my NixOS use-case
they are also fine because they are never used as downstream install
variables, only for reading not writing.

To avoid the problems I face, and restore symmetry, I deleted the
exported and arranged to have many `${project}_TOOLS_INSTALL_DIR`s.
`AddLLVM` now instead expects each project to define its own, and they
do so based on `CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR`. `LLVMConfig` still exports
`LLVM_TOOLS_BINARY_DIR` which is the location for the tools defined in
the usual way, matching the other remaining exported variables.

For the `AddLLVM` changes, I tried to copy the existing pattern of
internal vs non-internal or for LLVM vs for downstream function/macro
names, but it would good to confirm I did that correctly.

Reviewed By: nikic

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117977
2022-06-10 14:35:18 +00:00
Amir Ayupov d44f99c748 [BOLT] Added fuzzer target (llvm-bolt-fuzzer)
This adds a target that would consume random binary as an
input ELF file.
TBD: add structured input support (ELF).

Build:
```
cmake /path/to/llvm-project/llvm -GNinja \
-DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD="X86;AArch64" \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
-DLLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=1 \
-DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=<sanitizer-capable clang> \
-DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=<sanitizer-capable clang++> \
-DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="bolt"  \
-DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER=Address \
-DLLVM_USE_SANITIZE_COVERAGE=On
ninja llvm-bolt-fuzzer
```

Test Plan: ninja llvm-bolt-fuzzer

Reviewed By: maksfb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120016
2022-02-20 17:24:16 -08:00
Vladislav Khmelevsky 5c2ae5f454 [BOLT] Refactor heatmap to be standalone tool
Separate heatmap from bolt and build it as standalone tool.

Reviewed By: maksfb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118946
2022-02-07 22:00:44 +03:00
Rafael Auler a34c753fe7 Rebase: [NFC] Refactor sources to be buildable in shared mode
Summary:
Moves source files into separate components, and make explicit
component dependency on each other, so LLVM build system knows how to
build BOLT in BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON.

Please use the -c merge.renamelimit=230 git option when rebasing your
work on top of this change.

To achieve this, we create a new library to hold core IR files (most
classes beginning with Binary in their names), a new library to hold
Utils, some command line options shared across both RewriteInstance
and core IR files, a new library called Rewrite to hold most classes
concerned with running top-level functions coordinating the binary
rewriting process, and a new library called Profile to hold classes
dealing with profile reading and writing.

To remove the dependency from BinaryContext into X86-specific classes,
we do some refactoring on the BinaryContext constructor to receive a
reference to the specific backend directly from RewriteInstance. Then,
the dependency on X86 or AArch64-specific classes is transfered to the
Rewrite library. We can't have the Core library depend on targets
because targets depend on Core (which would create a cycle).

Files implementing the entry point of a tool are transferred to the
tools/ folder. All header files are transferred to the include/
folder. The src/ folder was renamed to lib/.

(cherry picked from FBD32746834)
2021-10-08 11:47:10 -07:00