DWARF5 spec says about single file split case:
"The sections that do not require relocation, however, can be written
to the relocatable object (.o) file but ignored by the
the linker or they can be written to a separate DWARF object (.dwo) file
that need not be accessed by the linker."
Nice way to make linker to ignore them is to set SHF_EXCLUDE flag.
It seems to be not harmful to always set it for .dwo sections.
That is what this patch does.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52303
llvm-svn: 342800
Summary:
The TType encoding, LSDA encoding, and personality encoding are all
passed explicitly by CodeGen to the assembler through .cfi_* directives,
so only the AsmPrinter needs to know about them.
The FDE CFI encoding however, controls the encoding of the label
implicitly created by the .cfi_startproc directive. That directive seems
to be special in that it doesn't take an encoding, so the assembler just
has to know how to encode one DSO-local label reference from .eh_frame
to .text.
As a result, it looks like MC will continue to have to know when the
large code model is in use. Perhaps we could invent a '.cfi_startproc
[large]' flag so that this knowledge doesn't need to pollute the
assembler.
Reviewers: davide, lliu0, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: hiraditya, fedor.sergeev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50533
llvm-svn: 339397
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
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
There are quite a few if statements that enumerate all these cases. It gets
even worse in our fork of LLVM where we also have a Triple::cheri (which
is mips64 + CHERI instructions) and we had to update all if statements that
check for Triple::mips64 to also handle Triple::cheri. This patch helps to
reduce our diff to upstream and should also make some checks more readable.
Reviewed By: atanasyan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48548
llvm-svn: 335493
With compilation fix.
Original commit message:
D39788 added a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes
to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag.
This change does following two things on top:
1) Imagine the case when there are -ffunction-sections flag given and there are text sections in COMDATs.
The patch adds a '.stack-size' section into corresponding COMDAT group, so that linker will be able to
eliminate them fast during resolving the COMDATs.
2) Patch sets a SHF_LINK_ORDER flag and links '.stack-size' with the corresponding .text.
With that linker will be able to do -gc-sections on dead stack sizes sections.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46874
llvm-svn: 335336
D39788 added a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes
to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag.
This change does following two things on top:
1) Imagine the case when there are -ffunction-sections flag given and there are text sections in COMDATs.
The patch adds a '.stack-size' section into corresponding COMDAT group, so that linker will be able to
eliminate them fast during resolving the COMDATs.
2) Patch sets a SHF_LINK_ORDER flag and links '.stack-size' with the corresponding .text.
With that linker will be able to do -gc-sections on dead stack sizes sections.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46874
llvm-svn: 335332
These symbols only get included in the output symbols table if
they are used in a relocation.
This behaviour matches more closely the ELF object writer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46561
llvm-svn: 332005
Updated wasm section symbols names to match section name, and ensure all
referenced sections will have a symbol (per DWARF spec v3, Figure 43)
Patch by Yury Delendik!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46543
llvm-svn: 331664
Summary:
Darwin dynamic linker can handle weak symbols in ConstDataSection.
ReadonReadOnlyWithRel symbols should be emitted in ConstDataSection
instead of normal DataSection.
rdar://problem/39298457
Reviewers: dexonsmith, kledzik
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45472
llvm-svn: 329752
- MSVC was not OK with a static_assert referencing a non-static member
variable, even though it was just in a sizeof(expression). I move the
assert into the emit function, where it is probably more useful.
- Tests were failing in builds which did not have the X86 target
configured. Since this functionality is not target-specific, I have
removed the target specifiers from the .ll files.
llvm-svn: 329201
Summary:
This patch adds a DwarfAccelTableEmitter class, which generates an
accelerator table, as specified in DWARF v5 standard. At the moment it
only generates a DIE offset column and (if we are indexing more than one
compile unit) a CU column.
Indexing type units is not currently supported, as we don't even have
the ability to generate DWARF v5-compatible compile units.
The implementation is not data-source agnostic like the one generating
apple tables. This was not necessary as we currently only have one user
of this code, and without a second user it was not obvious to me how to
best abstract this. (The difference between these tables and the apple
ones is that they need a lot more metadata about the debug info they are
indexing).
The generation is triggered by the --accel-tables argument, which
supersedes the --dwarf-accel-tables arg -- the latter was a simple
on-off switch, but not we can choose between two kinds of accelerator
tables we can generate.
This is tested by parsing the generated tables with llvm-dwarfdump and
the DWARFVerifier, and I've also checked that GNU readelf is able to
make sense of the tables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43286
llvm-svn: 329179
offsets for code models other than small/medium. For JIT application,
memory layout is less controlled and can result in truncations
otherwise.
Patch based on one by Olexa Bilaniuk!
llvm-svn: 328400
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
The original patch didn't have the lit.local.cfg file that restricts the new
test to x86, thus the new test was failing on the non-x86 bots.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
The reverts r322008, which was a revert of r322005.
This reverts commit a05b89f9aca70597dc79fe97bc49b50b51f525ba.
llvm-svn: 322136
The new test fails on the Hexagon bot. Reverting while I investigate.
This reverts https://reviews.llvm.org/rL322005
This reverts commit b7e0026b4385180c378edc658ec91a39566f2942.
llvm-svn: 322008
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
llvm-svn: 322005
Currently this is an LLVM extension to the COFF spec which is
experimental and intended to speed up linking. For now it is
behind a hidden cl::opt flag, but in the future we can move it
to a "real" cc1 flag and have the driver pass it through whenever
it is appropriate.
The patch to actually make use of this section in lld will come
in a followup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40917
llvm-svn: 320649
Re applying after fixing issues in the diff, sorry for any painful conflicts/merges!
Original RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-August/117028.html
This change adds a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag. The section contains pairs of function symbol references (8 byte) and stack sizes (unsigned LEB128).
The contents of this section can be used to measure changes to stack sizes between different versions of the compiler or a source base. The advantage of having a section is that we can extract this information when examining binaries that we didn't build, and it allows users and tools easy access to that information just by referencing the binary.
There is a follow up change to add an option to clang.
Thanks.
Reviewers: hfinkel, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: thegameg, asb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39788
llvm-svn: 319430
Summary:
Original RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-August/117028.html
I wasn't sure who to put as reviewers, so please add/remove people as appropriate.
This change adds a '.stack-size' section containing metadata on function stack sizes to output ELF files behind the new -stack-size-section flag. The section contains pairs of function symbol references (8 byte) and stack sizes (unsigned LEB128).
The contents of this section can be used to measure changes to stack sizes between different versions of the compiler or a source base. The advantage of having a section is that we can extract this information when examining binaries that we didn't build, and it allows users and tools easy access to that information just by referencing the binary.
There is a follow up change to add an option to clang.
Thanks.
Reviewers: hfinkel, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: thegameg, asb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39788
llvm-svn: 319423
Summary:
Xcode's dsymutil emits a __swift_ast DWARF section, which is required for debugging,
and which contains a byte-for-byte dump of the swiftmodule file.
Add this feature to llvm-dsymutil.
Tested with `gobjdump --dwarf=info -s`, by verifying that the contents of
`__DWARF.__swift_ast` match between Xcode's dsymutil and llvm-dsymutil
(Xcode's dwarfdump and llvm-dwarfdump don't currently recognize the
__swift_ast section).
Reviewers: aprantl, friss
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38504
llvm-svn: 315066
Summary:
Xcode's dsymutil emits a __swift_ast DWARF section, which is required for debugging,
and which contains a byte-for-byte dump of the swiftmodule file.
Add this feature to llvm-dsymutil.
Tested with `gobjdump --dwarf=info -s`, by verifying that the contents of
`__DWARF.__swift_ast` match between Xcode's dsymutil and llvm-dsymutil
(Xcode's dwarfdump and llvm-dwarfdump don't currently recognize the
__swift_ast section).
Reviewers: aprantl, friss
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38504
llvm-svn: 315014
Summary:
Xcode's dsymutil emits a __swift_ast DWARF section, which is required for debugging,
and which contains a byte-for-byte dump of the swiftmodule file.
Add this feature to llvm-dsymutil.
Tested with `gobjdump --dwarf=info -s`, by verifying that the contents of
`__DWARF.__swift_ast` match between Xcode's dsymutil and llvm-dsymutil
(Xcode's dwarfdump and llvm-dwarfdump don't currently recognize the
__swift_ast section).
Reviewers: aprantl, friss
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38504
llvm-svn: 315004
This means that we can honor -fdata-sections rather than
always creating a segment for each symbol.
It also allows for a followup change to add .init_array and friends.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37876
llvm-svn: 313395
Looks like these were copied from the ELF sections but
don't apply to Wasm and were not used anywhere.
Also remove unused Wasm methods in MCContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37633
llvm-svn: 313058
I was surprised to see the code model being passed to MC. After all,
it assembles code, it doesn't create it.
The one place it is used is in the expansion of .cfi directives to
handle .eh_frame being more that 2gb away from the code.
As far as I can tell, gnu assembler doesn't even have an option to
enable this. Compiling a c file with gcc -mcmodel=large produces a
regular looking .eh_frame. This is probably because in practice linker
parse and recreate .eh_frames.
In llvm this is used because the JIT can place the code and .eh_frame
very far apart. Ideally we would fix the jit and delete this
option. This is hard.
Apart from confusion another problem with the current interface is
that most callers pass CodeModel::Default, which is bad since MC has
no way to map it to the target default if it actually needed to.
This patch then replaces the argument with a boolean with a default
value. The vast majority of users don't ever need to look at it. In
fact, only CodeGen and llvm-mc use it and llvm-mc just to enable more
testing.
llvm-svn: 309884
This creates a new library called BinaryFormat that has all of
the headers from llvm/Support containing structure and layout
definitions for various types of binary formats like dwarf, coff,
elf, etc as well as the code for identifying a file from its
magic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33843
llvm-svn: 304864
. there should be no runtime relocation inside the bpf function.
. relocation supported here mostly for debugging.
. a test case is added.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 302055
All MIPS .debug_* sections should be marked with ELF type SHT_MIPS_DWARF
accordingly the specification [1]. Also the same section type is assigned
to these sections by GNU tools.
[1] ftp.software.ibm.com/software/os390/czos/dwarf/mips_extensions.pdf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29789
llvm-svn: 297447
With the "wasm32-unknown-unknown-wasm" triple, this allows writing out
simple wasm object files, and is another step in a larger series toward
migrating from ELF to general wasm object support. Note that this code
and the binary format itself is still experimental.
llvm-svn: 296190
This just adds the basic skeleton for supporting a new object file format.
All of the actual encoding will be implemented in followup patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26722
llvm-svn: 295803
On ELF every section can have a corresponding section symbol. When in
an assembly file we have
.quad .text
the '.text' refers to that symbol.
The way we used to handle them is to leave .text an undefined symbol
until the very end when the object writer would map them to the
actual section symbol.
The problem with that is that anything before the end would see an
undefined symbol. This could result in bad diagnostics
(test/MC/AArch64/label-arithmetic-diags-elf.s), or incorrect results
when using the asm streamer (est/MC/Mips/expansion-jal-sym-pic.s).
Fixing this will also allow using the section symbol earlier for
setting sh_link of SHF_METADATA sections.
This patch includes a few hacks to avoid changing our behaviour when
handling conflicts between section symbols and other symbols. I
reported pr31850 to track that.
llvm-svn: 293936
The main issue here is that the "thumb" flag wasn't set for some of these
sections, making MSVC's link.exe fails to correctly relocate code
against the symbols inside these sections. link.exe could fail for
instance with the "fixup is not aligned for target 'XX'" error. If
linking doesn't fail, the relocation process goes wrong in the end and
invalid code is generated by the linker.
This patch adds Thumb/ARM information so that the right flags are set
on COFF/Windows.
Patch by Adrien Guinet.
llvm-svn: 273880
MC only needs to know if the output is PIC or not. It never has to
decide about creating GOTs and PLTs for example. The only thing that
MC itself uses this information for is expanding "macros" in sparc and
mips. The rest I am pretty sure could be moved to CodeGen.
This is a cleanup and isolates the code from future changes to
Reloc::Model.
llvm-svn: 269909
Changed emitting offset of macinfo entry into compiler unit DIE to use "addSectionLabel" method rather than explicitly calculating size/offset of macro entry.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16292
llvm-svn: 259358
Summary:
There are three parts to inlined call frames:
1. The inlinee line subsection
2. The inline site symbol record
3. The function ids referenced by both
This change starts by emitting function ids (3) for all subprograms and
emitting the base inline site symbol record (2). The actual line numbers
in (2) use an encoded format that will come next, along with the inlinee
line subsection.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16333
llvm-svn: 259217
Various bits we want to use the new ABI actually compile with "-arch armv7k
-miphoneos-version-min=9.0". Not ideal, but also not ridiculous given how
slices work.
llvm-svn: 258975
InitMCObjectFileInfo was trying to override the triple in awkward ways.
For example, a triple specifying COFF but not Windows was forced as ELF.
This makes it easy for internal invariants to get violated, such as
those which triggered PR25912.
This fixes PR25912.
llvm-svn: 256226
This is very rudimentary support for debug_cu_index, but it is enough to
allow llvm-dwarfdump to find the offsets for contributions and
correctly dump debug_info.
It will need to actually find the real signature of the unit and build
the real hash table with the right number of buckets, as per the DWP
specification.
It will also need to be expanded to cover the tu_index as well.
llvm-svn: 254489
If a section is rw, it is irrelevant if the dynamic linker will write to
it or not.
It looks like llvm implemented this because gcc was doing it. It looks
like gcc implemented this in the hope that it would put all the
relocated items close together and speed up the dynamic linker.
There are two problem with this:
* It doesn't work. Both bfd and gold will map .data.rel to .data and
concatenate the input sections in the order they are seen.
* If we want a feature like that, it can be implemented directly in the
linker since it knowns where the dynamic relocations are.
llvm-svn: 253436
The way prelink used to work was
* The compiler decides if a given section only has relocations that
are know to point to the same DSO. If so, it names it
.data.rel.ro.local<something>.
* The static linker puts all of these together.
* The prelinker program assigns addresses to each library and resolves
the local relocations.
There are many problems with this:
* It is incompatible with address space randomization.
* The information passed by the compiler is redundant. The linker
knows if a given relocation is in the same DSO or not. If could sort
by that if so desired.
* There are newer ways of speeding up DSO (gnu hash for example).
* Even if we want to implement this again in the compiler, the previous
implementation is pretty broken. It talks about relocations that are
"resolved by the static linker". If they are resolved, there are none
left for the prelinker. What one needs to track is if an expression
will require only dynamic relocations that point to the same DSO.
At this point it looks like the prelinker is an historical curiosity.
For example, fedora has retired it because it failed to build for two
releases
(http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/prelink.git/commit/?id=eb43100a8331d91c801ee3dcdb0a0bb9babfdc1f)
This patch removes support for it. That is, it stops printing the
".local" sections.
llvm-svn: 253280
We now create the .eh_frame section early, just like every other special
section.
This means that the special flags are visible in code that explicitly
asks for ".eh_frame".
llvm-svn: 252313
Recommit r250342: move coal-sections-powerpc.s to subdirectory for powerpc.
Some background on why we don't have to use *coal* sections anymore:
Long ago when C++ was new and "weak" had not been standardized, an attempt was
made in cctools to support C++ inlines that can be coalesced by putting them
into their own section (TEXT/textcoal_nt instead of TEXT/text).
The current macho linker supports the weak-def bit on any symbol to allow it to
be coalesced, but the compiler still puts weak-def functions/data into alternate
section names, which the linker must map back to the base section name.
This patch makes changes that are necessary to prevent the compiler from using
the "coal" sections and have it use the non-coal sections instead when the
target architecture is not powerpc:
TEXT/textcoal_nt instead use TEXT/text
TEXT/const_coal instead use TEXT/const
DATA/datacoal_nt instead use DATA/data
If the target is powerpc, we continue to use the *coal* sections since anyone
targeting powerpc is probably using an old linker that doesn't have support for
the weak-def bits.
Also, have the assembler issue a warning if it encounters a *coal* section in
the assembly file and inform the users to use the non-coal sections instead.
rdar://problem/14265330
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13188
llvm-svn: 250370
Recommit r250342: add -arch=ppc32 to the RUN lines of powerpc tests.
Some background on why we don't have to use *coal* sections anymore:
Long ago when C++ was new and "weak" had not been standardized, an attempt was
made in cctools to support C++ inlines that can be coalesced by putting them
into their own section (TEXT/textcoal_nt instead of TEXT/text).
The current macho linker supports the weak-def bit on any symbol to allow it to
be coalesced, but the compiler still puts weak-def functions/data into alternate
section names, which the linker must map back to the base section name.
This patch makes changes that are necessary to prevent the compiler from using
the "coal" sections and have it use the non-coal sections instead when the
target architecture is not powerpc:
TEXT/textcoal_nt instead use TEXT/text
TEXT/const_coal instead use TEXT/const
DATA/datacoal_nt instead use DATA/data
If the target is powerpc, we continue to use the *coal* sections since anyone
targeting powerpc is probably using an old linker that doesn't have support for
the weak-def bits.
Also, have the assembler issue a warning if it encounters a *coal* section in
the assembly file and inform the users to use the non-coal sections instead.
rdar://problem/14265330
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13188
llvm-svn: 250349
Some background on why we don't have to use *coal* sections anymore:
Long ago when C++ was new and "weak" had not been standardized, an attempt was
made in cctools to support C++ inlines that can be coalesced by putting them
into their own section (TEXT/textcoal_nt instead of TEXT/text).
The current macho linker supports the weak-def bit on any symbol to allow it to
be coalesced, but the compiler still puts weak-def functions/data into alternate
section names, which the linker must map back to the base section name.
This patch makes changes that are necessary to prevent the compiler from using
the "coal" sections and have it use the non-coal sections instead when the
target architecture is not powerpc:
TEXT/textcoal_nt instead use TEXT/text
TEXT/const_coal instead use TEXT/const
DATA/datacoal_nt instead use DATA/data
If the target is powerpc, we continue to use the *coal* sections since anyone
targeting powerpc is probably using an old linker that doesn't have support for
the weak-def bits.
Also, have the assembler issue a warning if it encounters a *coal* section in
the assembly file and inform the users to use the non-coal sections instead.
rdar://problem/14265330
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13188
llvm-svn: 250342
This prevents MC clients from getting COFF.h, which conflicts with
winnt.h macros. Also a minor IWYU cleanup. Now the only public headers
including COFF.h are in Object, and they actually need it.
llvm-svn: 246784
This reverts commit r245047.
It was failing on the darwin bots. The problem was that when running
./bin/llc -march=msp430
llc gets to
if (TheTriple.getTriple().empty())
TheTriple.setTriple(sys::getDefaultTargetTriple());
Which means that we go with an arch of msp430 but a triple of
x86_64-apple-darwin14.4.0 which fails badly.
That code has to be updated to select a triple based on the value of
march, but that is not a trivial fix.
llvm-svn: 245062
Other than some places that were handling unknown as ELF, this should
have no change. The test updates are because we were detecting
arm-coff or x86_64-win64-coff as ELF targets before.
It is not clear if the enum should live on the Triple. At least now it lives
in a single location and should be easier to move somewhere else.
llvm-svn: 245047
Summary
This change turns on the emission of
__LLVM_Stackmaps section when generating COFF binaries.
Test Plan
Added a scenario to the test case:
test\CodeGen\X86\statepoint-stackmap-format.ll.
Code Review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10680
llvm-svn: 240613
Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
The first time this was committed it accidentally fixed an inconsistency in
triples in llvm-mc and this caused a failure. This inconsistency was fixed in
r239808.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
llvm-svn: 239812
Summary:
This instruction encodes a loading operation that may fault, and a label
to branch to if the load page-faults. The locations of potentially
faulting loads and their "handler" destinations are recorded in a
FaultMap section, meant to be consumed by LLVM's clients.
Nothing generates FAULTING_LOAD_OP instructions yet, but they will be
used in a future change.
The documentation (FaultMaps.rst) needs improvement and I will update
this diff with a more expanded version shortly.
Depends on D10196
Reviewers: rnk, reames, AndyAyers, ab, atrick, pgavlin
Reviewed By: atrick, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10197
llvm-svn: 239740
Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar trivial patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
llvm-svn: 239721
Summary:
Following on from r209907 which made personality encodings indirect, do the
same for TType encodings. This fixes the case where a try/catch block needs
to generate references to, for example, std::exception in the
.gcc_except_table.
Previous attempts at committing this broke the buildbots due to bugs in IAS.
These bugs have now been fixed so trying again.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: srhines, joerg, tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9669
llvm-svn: 238863
.safeseh adds an entry to the .sxdata section to register all the
appropriate functions which may handle an exception. This entry is not
a relocation to the symbol but instead the symbol table index of the
function.
llvm-svn: 238641
It caused a smaller number of failures than the previous attempt at committing but still caused a couple on the llvm-linux-mips builder. Reverting while I investigate the remainder.
llvm-svn: 238483
Summary:
Following on from r209907 which made personality encodings indirect, do the
same for TType encodings. This fixes the case where a try/catch block needs
to generate references to, for example, std::exception in the
.gcc_except_table.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: srhines, joerg, tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9669
llvm-svn: 238427
This broke the llvm-mips-linux builder and several of our out-of-tree builders.
Initial investigations show that the commit probably isn't the problem but
reverting anyway while I investigate.
llvm-svn: 238302
Summary:
Following on from r209907 which made personality encodings indirect, do the
same for TType encodings. This fixes the case where a try/catch block needs
to generate references to, for example, std::exception in the
.gcc_except_table.
This commit uses DW_EH_PE_sdata8 for N64 as far as is possible at the moment.
However, it is possible to end up with DW_EH_PE_sdata4 when a TargetMachine is
not available. There's no risk of issues with inconsistency here since the
tables are self describing but it does mean there is a small chance of the
PC-relative offset being out of range for particularly large programs.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: srhines, joerg, tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9669
llvm-svn: 238190
This starts merging MCSection and MCSectionData.
There are a few issues with the current split between MCSection and
MCSectionData.
* It optimizes the the not as important case. We want the production
of .o files to be really fast, but the split puts the information used
for .o emission in a separate data structure.
* The ELF/COFF/MachO hierarchy is not represented in MCSectionData,
leading to some ad-hoc ways to represent the various flags.
* It makes it harder to remember where each item is.
The attached patch starts merging the two by moving the alignment from
MCSectionData to MCSection.
Most of the patch is actually just dropping 'const', since
MCSectionData is mutable, but MCSection was not.
llvm-svn: 237936
Summary:
The object format can be set to something other than MachO, e.g.
to use ELF-on-Darwin for MCJIT. This already works on Windows, so
there's no reason it shouldn't on Darwin.
Reviewers: lhames, grosbach
Subscribers: rafael, grosbach, t.p.northover, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6185
llvm-svn: 236455
This lets us pass the symbol to the constructor and avoid the mutable field.
This also opens the way for outputting the symbol only when needed, instead
of outputting them at the start of the file.
llvm-svn: 231859
Any code creating an MCSectionELF knows ELF and already provides the flags.
SectionKind is an abstraction used by common code that uses a plain
MCSection.
Use the flags to compute the SectionKind. This removes a lot of
guessing and boilerplate from the MCSectionELF construction.
llvm-svn: 227476
I also added a test.
Original message:
Allow FDE references outside the +/-2GB range supported by PC relative
offsets for code models other than small/medium. For JIT application,
memory layout is less controlled and can result in truncations
otherwise.
Patch from Akos Kiss.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6079
llvm-svn: 222897
This reverts commit r222760.
It changed our behaviour on PIC so we don't match gas anymore. It also
included lots of unnecessary changes to tests.
If those changes are desirable, there should be an independent discussion
as they are out of scope for that patch.
I will recommit the other bits.
llvm-svn: 222896
and PIC:
Allow FDE references outside the +/-2GB range supported by PC relative
offsets for code models other than small/medium. For JIT application,
memory layout is less controlled and can result in truncations
otherwise.
Patch from Akos Kiss.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6079
llvm-svn: 222760
offsets for code models other than small/medium. For JIT application,
memory layout is less controlled and can result in truncations
otherwise.
Patch from Akos Kiss.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6079
llvm-svn: 222538
This allows COFF targets to emit accelerator tables
when requested by -dwarf-accel-tables=Enable instead
of aborting. The test DebugInfo/cross-cu-inlining.ll
covers this on COFF platforms.
llvm-svn: 222034
Remove dynamic relocations of __gxx_personality_v0 from the .eh_frame.
The MIPS64 follow-up of the MIPS32 fix (rL209907).
Patch by Vladimir Stefanovic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6141
llvm-svn: 221408
link.exe:
Fuzz testing has shown that COMMON symbols with size > 32 will always
have an alignment of at least 32 and all symbols with size < 32 will
have an alignment of at least the largest power of 2 less than the size
of the symbol.
binutils:
The BFD linker essentially work like the link.exe behavior but with
alignment 4 instead of 32. The BFD linker also supports an extension to
COFF which adds an -aligncomm argument to the .drectve section which
permits specifying a precise alignment for a variable but MC currently
doesn't support editing .drectve in this way.
With all of this in mind, we decide to play a little trick: we can
ensure that the alignment will be respected by bumping the size of the
global to it's alignment.
llvm-svn: 218201
This patch adds code to emits the StackMap section on ELF systems. This section is required to support llvm.experimental.stackmap and llvm.experimental.patchpoint intrinsics.
Reviewers: ributzka, echristo
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4574
llvm-svn: 214538
This recommits r208930, r208933, and r208975 (by reverting r209338) and
reverts r209529 (the FIXME to readd this functionality once the tools
were fixed) now that DWP has been fixed to cope with a single section
for all fission type units.
Original commit message:
"Since type units in the dwo file are handled by a debug aware tool,
they don't need to leverage the ELF comdat grouping to implement
deduplication. Avoid creating all the .group sections for these as a
space optimization."
llvm-svn: 213956
Having both Triple::arm64 and Triple::aarch64 is extremely confusing, and
invites bugs where only one is checked. In reality, the only legitimate
difference between the two (arm64 usually means iOS) is also present in the OS
part of the triple and that's what should be checked.
We still parse the "arm64" triple, just canonicalise it to Triple::aarch64, so
there aren't any LLVM-side test changes.
llvm-svn: 213743
--
This patch enables LLVM to emit Win64-native unwind info rather than
DWARF CFI. It handles all corner cases (I hope), including stack
realignment.
Because the unwind info is not flexible enough to describe stack frames
with a gap of unknown size in the middle, such as the one caused by
stack realignment, I modified register spilling code to place all spills
into the fixed frame slots, so that they can be accessed relative to the
frame pointer.
Patch by Vadim Chugunov!
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4081
llvm-svn: 211691
According Nick Kledzik (http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=19430#c2):
"... mach-o no longer needs names in the __eh_frame section (and has not for
years)."
Iain Sandoe confirms it is also unnecessary for their old darwin support.
llvm-svn: 211500
Correct the section flags for code built for Windows on ARM with
`-ffunction-sections`. Windows on ARM uses solely Thumb-2 instructions, and
indicates that the function is thumb by placing it in a text section that has
IMAGE_SCN_MEM_16BIT flag set.
When we encounter a .section directive, a new section is constructed. This may
be a text segment. In order to identify that we need the additional flag,
expose the target triple through the ObjectFileInfo as this information is lost
otherwise.
Since any modern ARM targeting environment on Windows would be Thumb-2 (Windows
ARM NT or Windows Embedded Compact), introducing a new flag to indicate the
section attribute seems to be a bit overkill. Simply depend on the target
triple. Since there is one location that this information is currently needed,
creating a target specific assembly parser and delegating the parsing of section
switches also feels a bit heavy handed. If it turns out that this information
ends up changing additional behaviour, then it may be worth considering that
alternative.
llvm-svn: 211481
This patch enables LLVM to emit Win64-native unwind info rather than
DWARF CFI. It handles all corner cases (I hope), including stack
realignment.
Because the unwind info is not flexible enough to describe stack frames
with a gap of unknown size in the middle, such as the one caused by
stack realignment, I modified register spilling code to place all spills
into the fixed frame slots, so that they can be accessed relative to the
frame pointer.
Patch by Vadim Chugunov!
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4081
llvm-svn: 211399
link.exe requires that the text section has the IMAGE_SCN_MEM_16BIT flag set.
Otherwise, it will treat the function as ARM. If this occurs, then jumps to the
function will fail, switching from thumb to ARM mode execution.
With this change, it is possible to link using the MSVC linker as well.
llvm-svn: 210415
This adjusts the section setup for the windows-itanium environment. This
environment does not report to be a known windows msvc environment, even though
it is (nearly) identical to the MSVC environment for C code.
llvm-svn: 210406
Add some whitespace, combine two sequential conditionals into a single one.
Reformat some section definitions to maintain uniformity in the function.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 210405
For MIPS, we have to encode the personality routine with
an indirect pointer to absptr; otherwise, some link warning
warning will be raised, and the program might crash in some
early MIPS Android device.
llvm-svn: 209907
This commit starts with a "git mv ARM64 AArch64" and continues out
from there, renaming the C++ classes, intrinsics, and other
target-local objects for consistency.
"ARM64" test directories are also moved, and tests that began their
life in ARM64 use an arm64 triple, those from AArch64 use an aarch64
triple. Both should be equivalent though.
This finishes the AArch64 merge, and everyone should feel free to
continue committing as normal now.
llvm-svn: 209577
This reverts commit r208930, r208933, and r208975.
It seems not all fission consumers are ready to handle this behavior.
Reverting until tools are brought up to spec.
llvm-svn: 209338
The .drectve section should be marked as IMAGE_SCN_LNK_REMOVE. This matches what
the MSVC toolchain does and accurately reflects that this section should not be
emitted into the final binary. This section is merely information for the
linker, comprising of additional linker directives.
llvm-svn: 209273
Since type units in the dwo file are handled by a debug aware tool, they
don't need to leverage the ELF comdat grouping to implement
deduplication. Avoid creating all the .group sections for these as a
space optimization.
llvm-svn: 208930
This restores the previous behaviour of just assuming that if you dont specify a
valid triple that you really meant the default triple with an ELF object file.
llvm-svn: 207349
Introduce support for WoA PE/COFF object file emission from LLVM. Add the new
target specific PE/COFF Streamer (ARMWinCOFFStreamer) that handles the ARM
specific behaviour of PE/COFF object emission. ARM exception information is not
yet emitted and is a TODO item.
The ARM specific object writer (ARMWinCOFFObjectWriter) handles the ARM specific
relocation handling in conjunction with the WinCOFFObjectWriter in the MC layer.
The MC layer needs to be updated to deal with the relocation adjustments.
Branch relocations are adjusted by 4 bytes (unlikely their ELF counterparts).
Minor tweaks to switch multiple conditional checks into equivalent switch
statements. The ObjectFileInfo is updated to relax the object file setup for
Windows COFF. Move the architecture checks into an assertion. Windows COFF is
currently only supported on x86, x86_64, and ARM (thumb). Rather than
defaulting to ELF, we will refuse to generate an object file. This is better
though as you do not get an (arbitrary) object file which is different from the
request.
llvm-svn: 207345
The most important part here is that we should actuall emit the stubs we refer
to in the exception table, but as a side issue this uses more sensible & GCC
compatible representations for some of the bits of information.
llvm-svn: 206380
Summary:
Local common symbols were properly inserted into the .bss section.
However, putting external common symbols in the .bss section would give
them a strong definition.
Instead, encode them as undefined, external symbols who's symbol value
is equivalent to their size.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, rafael, rnk
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3324
llvm-svn: 205811
This adds a second implementation of the AArch64 architecture to LLVM,
accessible in parallel via the "arm64" triple. The plan over the
coming weeks & months is to merge the two into a single backend,
during which time thorough code review should naturally occur.
Everything will be easier with the target in-tree though, hence this
commit.
llvm-svn: 205090
ARM64 has compact-unwind information, but doesn't necessarily want to
emit .eh_frame directives as well. This teaches MC about such a
situation so that it will skip .eh_frame info when compact unwind has
been successfully produced.
For functions incompatible with compact unwind, the normal information
is still written.
llvm-svn: 205087
Construct a uniform Windows target triple nomenclature which is congruent to the
Linux counterpart. The old triples are normalised to the new canonical form.
This cleans up the long-standing issue of odd naming for various Windows
environments.
There are four different environments on Windows:
MSVC: The MS ABI, MSVCRT environment as defined by Microsoft
GNU: The MinGW32/MinGW32-W64 environment which uses MSVCRT and auxiliary libraries
Itanium: The MSVCRT environment + libc++ built with Itanium ABI
Cygnus: The Cygwin environment which uses custom libraries for everything
The following spellings are now written as:
i686-pc-win32 => i686-pc-windows-msvc
i686-pc-mingw32 => i686-pc-windows-gnu
i686-pc-cygwin => i686-pc-windows-cygnus
This should be sufficiently flexible to allow us to target other windows
environments in the future as necessary.
llvm-svn: 204977